Would you Go to the Other Side of the World for Healthcare? - Instablogs
Would you Go to the Other Side of the World for Healthcare?
Grace Calderon , Quezon City: Apr 18 2008
Made Popular Apr 19 2008
Philippines :

Would you Go to the Other Side of the World for Healthcare?

Traveling for healthcare, also known as the phenomenon of medical tourism, is a fairly recent thing. Well, at least, the tag is rather new. Citizens from developed countries now opt to travel abroad to avail of healthcare services or medical treatments. In the process of availing healthcare in a foreign land, the patient takes the opportunity for rest, recreation, and leisure.

The medical patient thus becomes a medical tourist.

Medical tourism is for either a leisure tourist who happens to want or need a medical check-up or a medical tourist with a hospital or clinic as destination and wants sightseeing and shopping on the side. The medical tourist has set aside his health and leisure dollar or euro, but he is not relatively rich. He is someone who is likely not insured in his First World country, or someone who cannot afford private healthcare in the US because the medical treatment he needs is not covered by his insurance.

The primary concern of a medical tourist is the medical treatment or the health and wellness concern he needs to address at the soonest possible time. He chooses to travel halfway around the globe to an exotic Asian destination for warmer climate and a different atmosphere, plus of course the cheaper cost of medical treatment and healthcare outside his country. Most likely, he has also heard of the first-rate service, professionalism, and value-added personal concern of Asian health workers who are known around the world as excellent doctors, nurses, physical therapists, caregivers, etc.

The medical tourist will need a little downtime during post-treatment convalescence, and thus avail of activities that are restive, relaxed, and pleasurable. While in this strange land for a few days, he is curious to know and experience first-hand the culture and history, sights and sounds of this place that he has known only through Internet websites.

His budget primarily and largely goes to the medical treatment he came over for (operation cost, doctors’ fees, hospital room, etc). The extra money he has will be spent on getting to know the places nearby in the remaining days left on his visa. He may also splurge most of his remaining money on a farther destination such as the famed beaches in the Orient that he has aspired to see, since these are touted to be a paradise in the Internet websites. He will most definitely sample the food of this strange exotic land.

Several key factors have brought about the phenomenon of medical tourism. There are aging populations in Japan, US, and Europe. Healthcare is expensive in developed countries, such as those in North America and Europe. Patients have experienced a long waiting period in the national health system of some western European countries. Private and social benefit schemes are getting expensive, forcing patients to look for an alternative. At times, the individual ends up paying for his own healthcare. Often, some surgeries are not covered by insurance and will, therefore, be out-of-pocket expenses.

Outsourcing of healthcare becomes an attractive alternative because Third World prices are more affordable. The technology and quality gap between First World and Third World has been eradicated. Developing countries now boast of improved medical technology, as well as competitive healthcare prices. The Internet has compressed the world, offering a wide array of comprehensive information. International travel is easy and affordable. Add to all these is the prospect of fun and relaxation in a new land.

Categorized as an export product, medical tourism is basically marketed to people in the First World countries who are not insured or people who cannot afford private healthcare in the US. The phenomenon of medical tourism is said to now be a US$40 billion global industry and is projected to grow to US$188 billion by 2013.

http://medicaltourismguide.org/

http://www.philippinemedicaltourism.info/

http://www.medicaltourismindia.com/

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1 Stars
Alfred
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Agree with the author…here is another point I want to add in the content. The concept of medical tourism has its all disadvantages because the legal systems and medical accountability differs from one country to another country. The definition of medical malpractice laws might be different in different countries and there might be little liability for surgical mistakes. The medical provider's law may protect the provider if a patient from other country brings litigation against the providers.
1 Stars
Milind
Thiruvananthapuram, India
I am an Indian and know that people from not only the Subcontinent flock here for treatment, but from the Western world as well. This is mainly because of two reasons - 1) The medical facilities in India are world class that many Subcontinental countries do not have. Indians make some of the world's finest medicos. 2)Westerners come here because the cost of treatment in places like USA or Europe is prohibitively high.

Not only for treatments of life-threatening ailments that may require surgery but for cosmetic treatments as well like getting dental jobs, plastic surgery etc.

I don't agree when you say that moving long distances taxes the sick body. That aspect is often taken into account when people plan a visit to other countries for treatment.
1 Stars
Syaeful
Jakarta, Indonesia
It is a high risk business if you are moving a critically ill person from one side of the world to the other for treatment. The costs savings for such treatments can evaporate quickly in case complications from travel arises.
1 Stars
Vera
Manchester, United Kingdom
"His budget primarily and largely goes to the medical treatment he came over for (operation cost, doctors’ fees, hospital room, etc). The extra money he has will be spent on getting to know the places nearby in the remaining days left on his visa. He may also splurge most of his remaining money on a farther destination such as the famed beaches in the Orient that he has aspired to see, since these are touted to be a paradise in the Internet websites. He will most definitely sample the food of this strange exotic land."

Not if you got your liver transplanted yesterday or kidney replaced today. NOT ALL AILMENTS ALLOW TREATMENT WITH PLEASURE. Only rarely this might happen.
1 Stars
Ros
Manila, Philippines
Countries like United States, Britain, Canada and several others don’t believe in medical tourism because people of these countries know only one thing – hospitals and medical facilities in developing countries like India, Thailand and Sri Lanka are not safe and up to the international standard. You can hear questions like - Are medical institutions in India really safe? Is there no danger while trusting on a Thai dentist? For them, most of the medical practitioners in these countries are not well-qualified.
1 Stars
Pichet
Bangkok, Thailand
Best way to avoid blues of medical tourism is to gather information from the patient who has visited the particular country for the same purpose. Any informed patient makes the things good for you. You can club travel for medical treatment with vacation travel.
1 Stars
Suganthy
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Alfred said it right, it happens most of the time. Several countries offering medical tourism have poor medical malpractice laws. If something goes wrong in the treatment, the patients find that they are unable to reach local courts or medical boards because it doesn’t come in the sphere of legal system.
1 Stars
Michael
London, United Kingdom
Big NO to medical tourism, and the reasons are given in comments published above. We can take help of BPOs to know the best treatment available of any particular disease. after that we can search the best place for treatment. No need to go to the other side of the world. Excess tourism does mean cultural loss from local point of view.
1 Stars
Grace Calderon
Quezon City, Philippines
You’ll probably be surprised that there are medical institutions and hospitals in Thailand, Singapore, Philippines, and India that are world-class, meaning they have achieved international accreditation and are beholden to abide by international standards (e.g., legal, ethical, professional, etc.). As such, they are at par with the best that the Western world has to offer.

Organ transplants are not that numerous.

Tourism of this kind is not in excess. They really don’t come over in droves.

And this phenomenon rose out of the fact that medical costs have been prohibitive in the West, and some treatments aren’t covered by medical insurances.

Let’s face it. Medical tourism is an idea whose time has come.
1 Stars
Alice Vosloo livinglifebreathless..
Johannesburg, South Africa
I have heard of Plastic Surgery Safari’s here in SA. People from the UK and US especially come here for platic surgery, and go on a safari afterwards. An added benefit for some I suppose is the fact that you don’t need to tell your friends about getting the surgery... You just look REALLY refreshed upon your return! The surgery is also cheaper here with the exchange rate, but you get the same quality.
1 Stars
Grace Calderon
Quezon City, Philippines
Wow! This Plastic Surgery Safari is a brilliant marketing package. That’s some tourism acumen!
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