Sunday, August 17, 2008

Medical Tourism Globalization - Explore

Medical tourism, also known as travel or health tourism, is popularized widely by travel agencies and mass media to provide a back-up for today's rapidly growing trends of traveling to different countries to get cheaper and modern health-care facilities.

Report shows that medical tourists are traveling largely from U.S., Europe, U.K., Canada, Middle East, Japan because of their expensive health-care system or lack of health-care options locally. It's been established now that due to a sort of lengthy procedures for some of complicated illness, such as a hip replacement, patients have to wait several months in U.K. or Canada.
Whereas the same procedures may be started-off immediately just after their arrival at in countries like India, Singapore, Hong Kong, Thailand, Colombia, Philippines etc. In Colombia, the cost of knee replacement comes around $5000 USD including all associated fees.

According to research found in an article by the University of Delaware publication-the cost of surgery in Argentina, Cuba, India, Bolivia, Thailand, Colombia, Philippines or South Africa can be one-tenth of what it is in the United States or Western Europe, and sometimes even less.

A heart-valve replacement that would cost $200,000 or more in the U.S., for example, goes for $10,000 in Philippines and India-and that includes round-trip airfare and a brief vacation package.Similarly, a metal-free dental bridge worth $5,500 in the U.S.costs $500 in India or Bolivia and only $200 in the Philippines, a knee replacement in Thailand with six days of physical therapy costs about one-fifth of what it would in the States, and Lasik eye surgery worth $3,700 in the U.S. is available in many other countries for only $730.

Cosmetic surgery savings are even greater. A full face-lift that would cost $20,000 in the U.S. runs about $3,000 in Cuba, $2,700 in the Philippines or $2,500 in South Africa or $2,300 in Bolivia. Medical tourism has got momentum in India as some of the U.S. firms prescribe India for health-care. News goes around just like that get a new knee or hip at a discount,take a companion along for free plus pocket some of the money saved on the operation.Thats the kind of incentive some U.S. companies are offering employees who travels to India for health-care.

Although individual foreign patients have been coming to India for quite some time now, this kind of initiatives open up the floodgates of new wave of medical tourism. Blue Ridge Paper Products,a North Carolina based company, looking for outsourcing of its 2,000 employees to save up substantially as the cost of treatment in India is 80-90% less than in the U.S.

Here's the sheer economics at work where Blue Ridge plans to pay all the travel, lodging, meals, etc. for the patient and one family member, plus give up to 25% savings and they tied up reputed hospitals such as Apollo, Wockhardt, Escorts.

4 comments:

CLYDESDALE HOUSE said...

Medical Tourism finds traction. Absolutely. There may come a time where regional hospitalization for general health care will let the special market for specific high cost programs go to countries who have so specialized and costs are in keeping with the country economy. That is what is happening as we speak. Going to India, Russia, Thailand, South America, Cuba, and elsewhere is really just an extension of localized healthcare taken to the specialist level and where equipment and costs are manageable. As to the qualifications of those doing the procedures that may be another matter requiring deeper discussion. Bottomline is Medical Tourism is going to continue and increase dramatically over the continual growth of the baby boomer market where localized services cannot keep up with the demand. Stay tuned.

tanyaa said...

Medical tourism has surged into the healthcare debate as costs rise and consumers are asked to share a growing proportion of up-front expenses. The practice was once seen as a desperate move to seek care that was unavailableMedical tourism has surged into the healthcare debate as costs rise and consumers are asked to share a growing proportion of up-front expenses. The practice was once seen as a desperate move to seek care that was unavailable.
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Tanyaa
Promoter

Unknown said...

There are destinations in medical tourism which are still to be discovered! Eastern Europe popularity for US, UK medical travellers is growing. For example Kiev Heart Center located in Kiev, Ukraine is most modern cardio hospital in Eastern Europe. Prices lower than in India. For example heart bypass 9000 USD all included About the hospital http://www.heart.kiev.ua/en

Unknown said...

There are destinations in medical tourism which are still to be discovered! Eastern Europe popularity for US, UK medical travellers is growing. For example Kiev Heart Center located in Kiev, Ukraine is most modern cardio hospital in Eastern Europe. Prices lower than in India. For example heart bypass 9000 USD all included About the hospital http://www.heart.kiev.ua/en