Arab News
Arab News, Tue, Apr 15, 2025 | Shawwal 17, 1446
How preventive healthcare is quietly driving sustainability in Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia:
As global conversations about
sustainability expand, one sector is emerging as an unlikely player in the
environmental movement: healthcare.
Experts say a growing shift toward prevention —
rather than reaction — is not only improving personal health outcomes but
reducing long-term resource strain on hospitals, supply chains, and the planet.
“Preventive care and longevity-focused medicine
play a critical role in promoting environmental sustainability by reducing the
overall burden on healthcare systems,” said Dr. Walid Zaher, a Saudi scientist
and founder of Rewind.
“When individuals stay healthier for longer
through early detection, lifestyle interventions, and personalized medicine,
there is less need for resource-intensive treatments, hospitalizations, and
pharmaceutical use — each of which carries a significant environmental
footprint.”
According to Zaher, every reduction in
high-intensity care translates to real-world savings in emissions, energy, and
medical waste.
“Fewer medical interventions mean reduced energy
consumption, lower emissions from healthcare facilities, and less medical
waste,” he said. “By shifting focus from reactive to proactive care, we create a
more efficient, sustainable healthcare model that benefits both people and the
planet.”
Dr. Ksenia Butova, founder of Detki Family Clinic
and Molodost Clinic, agrees. She believes early diagnostics and family-centered
wellness are not only medically superior — they are environmentally responsible.
“The costliest treatments — both financially and
environmentally — come when disease is already in full swing,” she said.
“Hospital admissions, emergency interventions, aggressive medications. But most
of it can be prevented.”
She emphasized that check-ups today are no longer
just routine, but predictive. “Conducting in-depth check-ups designed to detect
diseases at their earliest, pre-symptomatic stages — or rule them out entirely —
helps alleviate the pressure on the healthcare system,” Butova said.
Among the pillars of preventive medicine are
targeted vaccination programs and ongoing wellness tracking — both of which
lower overall consumption of antibiotics, emergency care, and overprescribed
supplements.
“Nutrition science, mental health support, sleep
optimization, hormone and micronutrient balancing — these are not ‘luxuries,’”
Butova said. “They’re the new foundation of long-term health.”
The Kingdom is also investing in long-term
well-being through national policy. “Saudi Arabia is taking bold steps to
integrate health, wellness, and sustainability through a series of
forward-looking initiatives aligned with Vision 2030,” said Zaher. “From
national events like Saudi National Sports Day to wellness-centered urban
planning, the aim is to embed health and wellness into the fabric of daily
life.”
On the technology front, digitization of care is
helping clinics become more efficient and less wasteful.
“Clinics that operate paper-free are sustainable,”
explained Butova. “Everything from scheduling and medical records to treatment
plans and follow-ups becomes digital. Patients have easy access to their data,
and doctors spend less time on bureaucracy and more time on meaningful care.”
She also noted that online consultations reduce
traffic, emissions, and time lost to travel. “One Zoom consultation means one
less commute through city traffic, one less plastic coffee cup, one less parking
hassle,” she said. “It saves time, energy, and reduces our environmental
footprint.”
Both experts also pointed to a growing trend:
longevity tourism — the merging of high-end medical care with eco-conscious
lifestyle services.
“Longevity tourism is increasingly becoming a
natural extension of the broader eco-wellness movement — one that merges
sustainable living with proactive health optimization,” said Zaher. “In regions
like the Gulf, there’s a unique opportunity to position longevity tourism at the
intersection of luxury wellness and sustainability.”
Butova confirmed the trend is already
gaining traction. “People are flying to us from Russia and Kazakhstan for access
to rare vaccines … From Europe, the UK, and the US, we welcome patients seeking
comprehensive check-ups, personalized recovery programs, and cutting-edge
aesthetic treatments,” she said.
Still, awareness remains a challenge. Both Zaher
and Butova stressed the importance of education in shifting habits and norms.
“When we educate the public about the benefits of
preventive health measures, sustainable diets, and active lifestyles, we can
shift societal norms toward more eco-conscious behaviours,” Zaher said.
Butova added: “Public awareness is
everything. Without awareness, even the most advanced medical system won’t
work.”
Her clinics run webinars, host “health school”
events for families, and engage with communities through live Q&As. “One of the
most important missions of healthcare professionals is raising awareness about
obesity and metabolic health … That shift alone changes lives and reduces
wasteful, unconscious consumption,” she said.
At a time when sustainability often means
sacrifice, these experts argue that in medicine, it is quite the opposite: the
more proactive the system, the less wasteful it becomes.