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Mon 25 Apr, 2005 10:52 pm
Quote:Summertime. It's almost upon us. Millions will be heading out to foreign lands for vacation, adventure, tourism, or just a beautiful beach. But how about hip surgery or a multiple bypass or a facelift?
A growing number of tourists are doing just that: combining holidays with health care. And that's because a growing number of countries are offering first-rate medical care at third-world prices.
Many of these medical tourists can't afford health care at home; the 40 million uninsured Americans, for example. Others are going for procedures not covered by their insurance: cosmetic surgery, infertility treatment.
And the hospitals in these faraway countries are glad to have these medical tourists. In fact, they are courting their business, trying to get more people to outsource their own health care.
Vacation, Adventure And Surgery?
Quote:The hospital has state-of-the-art technology, and here's the clincher: the price. Treatment here costs about one-eighth what it does in the United States. It's the No. 1 international hospital in the world.
"It's sort of Ground Zero. I haven't heard anybody yet who's told us that they take more than 350,000 international patients a year," says Curt Schroeder, CEO of Bumrungrad.
Husker- I saw that "60 Minutes" piece, and was intrigued by it. I was especially interested in the hospital facilities in Thailand, which seemed so much more professional, pleasant and conducive to healing than what we have in the US.
I was also a bit pissed to learn that foreign hospitals have greater latitude in performing new operations, because of the lack of the FDA, which slows progress here to a crawl.
I think that if I had a condition, where a foreign hospital had a state of the art procedure that could not be procured in the US, I would go for it!
Well - it better be elective and not emergency
It was a very interesting piece.
I have a good friend that may have a heart transplant very soon, well you can never tell what's going to happen - next week will be telling: stint or mechanical heart if the stint fails or causes a problem.