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    Category: Treatment Package

    • ACL Tears, Knee Injuries and Sports Surgery Delays

      Sports injuries are rising rapidly across the UK, particularly ACL tears, meniscus injuries, shoulder damage and ankle ligament ruptures affecting active adults and younger patients. But long NHS waits for MRI scans, orthopaedic consultations and surgery are leaving many people in pain and unable to work, exercise or return to sport. Increasingly, UK patients are…

    • NHS Nurses Cover for Doctors: Why More UK Patients Are Choosing Private Treatment Abroad

      A Daily Telegraph investigation published on 9 May 2026 has revealed that almost half of NHS hospitals are using nurses to cover doctors’ shifts, highlighting growing pressure across the NHS workforce. For UK patients facing long NHS waits and rising private healthcare costs, the findings reinforce the case for faster consultant-led treatment abroad through MMG,…

    • MMG Launches Patient Orientation Meetings to Help Access Faster Treatment in Europe

      MMG has launched new free 15-minute Orientation Meetings in partnership with Manchester healthcare specialists CallCare to help UK patients navigate private treatment abroad. The sessions guide patients through diagnostics, treatment selection, finance options and booking surgery in Europe within six weeks of diagnostic clearance. Designed for patients facing long NHS waits and rising UK private…

    • Skip the Queue, Choose the Surgeon: MMG’s Accredited European Specialists

      If you are searching for private treatment in the UK, one critical question is often overlooked: who will perform your surgery? This blog explores the world-class surgeons leading MMG’s European hospitals, many with international training, high surgical volumes and extensive research credentials. It also explains why UK patients, often given little visibility over their surgeon,…

    • What Happens If Something Goes Wrong with Treatment Abroad?

      One of the most common and understandable questions patients ask before choosing treatment abroad is simple: what happens if something goes wrong? It is a fair question. Surgery, wherever it takes place, carries risk. What matters is not the absence of risk, but how that risk is managed, who is responsible and what support exists…