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The economics of digitally integrated wellness services in heritage regions

Shakhnoza AlimovaDepartment of Tourism and Hotel Management, Bukhara State UniversityDilfuza VakhabovaDepartment of Green Economy, Tashkent State University of EconomicsVohidjon AkramovDepartment Traumatology and Neurosurgery, Bukhara State Medical Institute
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Аннотация

Wellness tourism is among the fastest-growing segments of the global health economy, yet its development in Central Asian heritage regions remains constrained by fragmented service delivery, limited digital infrastructure, and a shortage of evidence-based planning tools. In this Perspective, we argue that advancing wellness tourism in such regions requires coupling econometric diagnosis of revenue drivers with the design of a digital platform that operationalizes those drivers, and we illustrate this dual approach using Bukhara, Uzbekistan-a UNESCO World Heritage Site rich in thermal springs, therapeutic hot sands, and mineral-rich muds. Drawing on panel data from 12 wellness facilities observed over 2021-2024, a weighted least squares model identifies three revenue determinants: client base size, service breadth, and qualified staffing. Client base expansion and qualified staffing emerge as the strongest positive determinants, while service breadth shows a paradoxical negative effect, suggesting that resource dispersion outweighs portfolio benefits in this setting. Revenue projections indicate substantial sectoral growth by 2030, with nature-oriented sanatoriums leading in relative terms. Building on these patterns, we propose the "Wellness Bukhara Voucher System"-a digitally integrated platform connecting disparate facilities through standardized vouchers, QR-code authentication, automated analytics, and a public-private partnership financial model. The platform addresses the diversification paradox through "network specialization," allowing each facility to deepen its core competencies while the system as a whole expands service breadth via cross-referrals. We discuss infrastructure, stakeholder, regulatory, and privacy conditions for viable deployment, and argue that this perspective offers a transferable model for heritage regions seeking to convert natural healing assets into digitally coordinated wellness economies.

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