news about medical tourism and patients travelling to foreign countries for medical treatment

Medical Tourism

news about medical tourism and patients travelling to foreign countries for medical treatment

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Medical Tourism: The Next Awaiting Avenue for Indian Tourism Industry


Medical Tourism: The Next Awaiting Avenue for Indian Tourism IndustryRNCOS Research: (http://www.rncos.com/Report/IM039.htm) Backed by the boom in medical tourism, the tourism industry in India is sure to register tremendous growth in the years to come.

RNCOS Research: (http://www.rncos.com/Report/IM039.htm) Growing impressively, the medical tourism has emerged as a major contributor to the overall tourism industry in India.

Offering a number of alternative systems of medicine, such as ayurveda, meditation, yoga and so on, to choose from, India seems to have become the latest hub for the patients from countries such as New Zealand, Australia to name a few. Whether it’s some chronic disease or a cosmetic surgery, people are flocking to India in search of relief from high costs and long waiting lists in their countries. During the year 2005 alone, about 1,53,000 foreigners landed in India to take advantage of the comparatively low priced and efficient medical services offered by the country.

A few of the reasons why the medical tourism has observed such a remarkable growth during the recent years include:

§ The reputation earned by the Indian medical professionals all over the world. A number of prominent hospitals throughout US, UK and Canada comprise of Indian nurses, doctors & paramedics, who are the backbone of the overall healthcare systems of these countries.

§ Medical procedures in India cost just a quarter as compared to the West and also the quality is as good as that of the international standards.

As per a recent market research report named, “Indian Tourism Industry Outlook (2006)”, published by RNCOS, “The medical system in India has the potential to lure more than one million medical tourists every year”.

As per experts at RNCOS, “The number of foreigners visiting India for medical treatment is growing at a rate of 17% per year”. “The foreign patients are likely to spend about $2.5 billion on medical treatment in India by the year 2012”, further added experts.

Report highlights:

§ Latest developments in the tourism industry in India.
§ Overview of Indian tourism industry in global perspective.
§ Introduction to the tourism industry in the Asia Pacific region.
§ Factors that influence the growth of the tourism industry in India.
§ Analysis of key players in this sector along with the strategies adopted by them for the further growth of the industry.
§ Future predictions about the industry for the years to come.

Surgery too expensive? Go to India


Surgery too expensive? Go to IndiaTo help cut its health care costs, Blue Ridge Paper Products is considering a program that gives employees the option of traveling to India to receive medical care.

“If the due diligence and feasibility checks out positively, then we plan to offer this as an option,” said Darrell Douglas, the company’s vice president of human resources.

The possibility of significant savings has led Blue Ridge Paper to consider the plan, which includes company-paid travel and lodging for a family member and the patient to undergo approved procedures at an internationally accredited hospital in New Delhi or elsewhere in India.

The kicker for the patient is the opportunity to share in up to 25 percent of those savings, which could amount to thousands of dollars for a hip procedure that costs $50,000 in North Carolina, but only about $18,000 in India, including the related travel expenses for two people.

To look into the program, Blue Ridge Paper is working with IndUShealth, a Raleigh company that coordinates overseas health care in Indian hospitals for American patients.

“We’re not exporting health care to India as much as importing competition in the United States,” said company President Tom Keesling, a former hospital CEO who helped launch IndUShealth last year.

The number of Americans traveling to countries such as India and Thailand for health care is rising, drawing increasing interest in what has been dubbed “medical tourism.”

“It is a leading-edge type of service that’s just beginning to get some attention,” said senior health care consultant Steve Graybill of the Charlotte office of Mercer Health & Benefits, a New York-based consulting firm."

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Go To Goa And Get Healthy


Go To Goa And Get Healthy
By Jonathan Walton

Everything from a bargain tummy tuck to cut-price heart surgery is being offered in a bid to tempt health tourists to India.

Patients aiming to dodge waiting lists and get cheaper private operations can head to Goa - thanks to a deal between a Bradford business and a hospital in the Indian Ocean resort.

Going to Goa is offering all-inclusive' packages including flights, luxury lodgings and surgery.

Director Jan Bostock said clients stood to save thousands of pounds on procedures ranging from a hair transplant to a heart bypass operation.
continued...

He said: "We set this business up because we felt people were being short-changed. I had dental work recently and couldn't believe the high cost.

"There can be queues for surgery. Our service shows that these procedures should not cost the earth."

Shipley-based Mr Bostock said a private heart bypass operation costing more than £15,000 in the UK could be had for £5,000 at the partner Victor Apollo Hospital.

Flights and accommodation cost about an extra £1,000 for a three-week stay.

He said: "We are facilitators. We do not give medical advice, but our service helps people get all the facts before they decide to go ahead."

Mr Bostock said clients are able to speak to the surgeon by phone or communicate by e-mail before going ahead. The company is also aiming to set up video-conferencing.

He said: "The doctors' credentials are available for the client and in turn the medical notes for the patient are sent to the team in Goa.

"We make sure we get all the questions answered and all the checks possible in place right from the start.

"We have to make sure our clients are 100 per cent confident about the procedure.

"The hospital is comparable with a British hospital, if not better. Standards of hygiene are incredibly high. There has not been a single record of MRSA."

The company's brochure promises "first class medical facilities and first class after care treatment" as well as a "home counselling" service.

But Telegraph & Argus columnist Dr Tom Smith warned potential patients to demand facts before committing to a procedure.

He said: "There are so many questions. Is the blood transfusion system safe? Does it screen for things like hepatitis? What are the safeguards against deep vein thrombosis? How good is the nursing care? Is there evidence of MRSA?

"I would want to know a great deal about the surgeons. In the UK you can find out a surgeon's success rate in his previous 1,000 operations. How are the post-operative morbidity rates?

"People must always be careful to weigh up the risks and the benefits of going abroad for health care."

A spokesman for Bradford and Airedale PCTs said people choosing private treatment in India did so at their own risk as there is no guarantee of the standard of care.

He said: "We would strongly recommend that anyone considering this first takes advice from their GP or other health professional.

"The need for this service is also debatable as NHS waiting lists continue to fall and patients are getting faster treatment than ever before for many conditions.

"And anyone who was regarded as an urgent case would be treated even sooner, free of charge."

e-mail: jonathan.walton @bradford.newsquest.co.uk

A PATIENT'S STORY: 'SPLENDID JOB'

George Marshall travelled to Bangalore in India for a double heart bypass operation in 2005.

He said he had no regrets about having his operation abroad.

The violin repairer, pictured, 74, had felt time was running out as he waited for NHS treatment.

He said: "I'm definitely glad I did it. They did a splendid job and I speak very highly of the staff and the hospital.

"I'm not sure how happy my GP was about it, but he did say paying for these things wasn't easy."

Mr Marshall, of Ilkley, spent £4,800, including flights and medical fees on his treatment. It was a saving of £14,000 on the potential bill for a private operation in this country.

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Sunday, June 11, 2006

Outsourcing Your Heart -- May 29, 2006


TIME Magazine Archive Article -- Outsourcing Your Heart -- May 29, 2006Outsourcing Your Heart
Elective surgery in India? Medical tourism is booming, and U.S. companies trying to contain health-care costs are starting to take notice
By UNMESH KHER


Whiplash was just the first agony that Kevin Miller, 45, suffered in a car accident last July. The second was sticker shock. The self-employed and uninsured chiropractor from Eunice, La., learned that it would cost $90,000 to get the herniated disk in his neck repaired. So, over the objections of his doctors, he turned to the Internet and made an appointment with Bumrungrad Hospital in Bangkok, the marble-floored mecca of the medical trade that--with its liveried bellhops, fountains and restaurants--resembles a grand hotel more than a clinic. There a U.S.-trained surgeon fixed Miller's injured disk for less than $10,000. "I wouldn't hesitate to come back for another procedure," says Miller, who was recovering last week at the Westin Grande in Bangkok.

With this surgical sojourn, his first trip outside the U.S., Miller joined the swelling ranks of medical tourists. As word has spread about the high-quality care and cut-rate surgery available in such countries as India, Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia, a growing stream of uninsured and underinsured Americans are boarding planes not for the typical face-lift or tummy tuck but for discount hip replacements and sophisticated heart surgeries. Bumrungrad alone, according to CEO Curtis Schroeder, saw its stream of American patients climb to 55,000 last year, a 30% rise. Three-quarters of them flew in from the U.S.; 83% came for noncosmetic treatments. Meanwhile, India's trade in international patients is increasing at the same rate.

That's still a trickle compared with the millions of surgeries performed each year in the $2 trillion U.S. health-care system. But a significant shift is under way. It's one that could put greater competitive pressure on U.S. hospitals as some of their most lucrative patients are siphoned off. Elective surgeries are key moneymakers for hospitals, and even a small drop-off can cut deep into their profits.

What may accelerate the trend is that some pioneering U.S. corporations, swamped by rising health-care costs, are taking a serious look at medical outsourcing. Blue Ridge Paper Products of Canton, N.C., a manufacturing company, may soon offer employees outsourcing as a health-care option. The carrot? The patient would get to pocket some of the firm's substantial savings.

The calculus behind this interest isn't complicated. Many major employers in the U.S. are self-insured, which means they pick up the tab for much of their employees' medical care. That's why three major corporations that collectively cover 240,000 lives asked Dr. Arnold Milstein, national healthcare "thought leader" at the consultancy Mercer Health & Benefits, to assess the best places to outsource elective surgeries. Procedures in Thailand and Malaysia, he found, cost only 20% to 25% as much as comparable ones in the U.S.; top-notch Indian hospitals sell such services at an even steeper discount.

The bottom line: If more private payers sent patients abroad for uncomplicated elective surgeries, the savings could be enormous. "This has the potential of doing to the U.S. health-care system what the Japanese auto industry did to American carmakers," says Princeton University healthcare economist Uwe Reinhardt.

U.S. hospitals could certainly do with a little global competition. For years, their share of the national heath-care bill has grown at a rate far faster than inflation, and today they gobble up a third of all medical expenditures. At current rates, the U.S. will be spending $1 of every $5 of its GDP on health care by 2015, yet more than 1 in 4 workers will be uninsured. The ingrained inefficiency of most hospitals doesn't help. "A lot of them still don't know how to schedule their operating rooms efficiently," says Reinhardt. "They've never had to. They always get paid, no matter how sloppy they are."

That sloppiness, among other things, widens the price gap with foreign hospitals that entrepreneurs are exploiting. United Group Programs (UGP) of Boca Raton, Fla., a third-party administrator that sells a low-premium, bare-bones form of coverage called a mini--medical plan, this month began promoting Bumrungrad Hospital as a preferred provider to its customers. Employees of self-insured businesses who use the more conventional plans designed by UGP will also have access to the Thai hospital. This means that UGP offers the option of partly or fully covered medical tourism to some 100,000 people, including those who could use it most.

Mini-med plans are increasingly popular with contract and hourly workers, who are more likely than most other workers to be uninsured. But these plans are controversial because the buyers often think they cover more than they actually do. UGP's plans at best cap reimbursement for surgery at $3,000 and hospital stays at $1,000 a day. That would barely cover an afternoon in a U.S. hospital. But in Thailand, says Jonathan Edelheit, UGP's vice president of sales and marketing, a heart bypass that would cost its U.S. customers $56,000 could be had for $8,000.

Companies with traditional plans are also taking the initiative. Blue Ridge Paper, which makes the DairyPak brand of packaging, was carved out of the forest-products firm Champion International when its employees bought a few factories that were scheduled to close. But health-care costs are hurting the company. So a Blue Ridge team plans to visit hospitals in India to assess their quality of care. If it gives the green light, Blue Ridge will begin promoting the option to its 2,000 workers.

Employees who opt for India would get to take along a family member, says Darrell Douglas, vice president of human resources, and the whole experience, including a recuperative stay at a hotel, would be covered. IndUShealth, a medical tourism start-up in Raleigh, N.C., will make all arrangements and coordinate care between U.S. and Indian providers. The sweetener: the company will share with these intrepid employees up to 25% of savings garnered from the outsourcing.

Get a new hip--and a rebate. Sounds like a bargain, but would people actually travel 10,000 miles for medical care just to make a few bucks? You bet. Polls commissioned by Milstein suggest that few consumers would opt for surgery abroad for incentives below $1,000. But raise the ante above $1,000, and the equation changes. Among people who have sick family members, about 45% of the underinsured or uninsured declare they would get on the plane; even 19% of those who have insurance say they're game. Above $5,000, the percentage of takers climbs to 61% and 40%, respectively.

State governments, which tend to offer generous health-care benefits, may find those numbers appealing. A bill in the West Virginia legislature sponsored by delegate Ray Canterbury outlines incentives for the public employee health-insurance program that are similar to Blue Ridge's. Hospital administrators attending the legislative session when the bill came up for a hearing in February nearly gagged, says Canterbury: "They were not happy. But I didn't expect them to be. The point is to make them face competition."

Is the quality of care in foreign hospitals high enough? To cater to an international clientele, many private hospitals abroad are applying for accreditation (many of them successfully) from the Joint Commission International, the global arm of the institution that accredits most U.S. hospitals. Many of the tourist hospitals teem with surgeons who have trained in the U.S. or Britain, which is a great comfort to American patients (the irony is that 25% of physicians in the U.S. got their M.D.s abroad). Escorts Heart Institute and Research Center in Delhi, for instance, was founded by an authority on robotic cardiac surgery, Dr. Naresh Trehan, formerly of New York University.

Wayne Steinard, 59, a general contractor from Winter Haven, Fla., is one of those U.S. patients "who fall through the cracks" of the health-care system, as he says. Steinard landed in New Delhi last week with his daughter Beth Keigans to get a clogged artery cleared and a stent installed. Steinard, too rich for Medicaid and too poor for insurance, certainly didn't have the $60,000 he would have had to pay back home. So he contacted PlanetHospital, a Malibu, Calif., medical-tourism agency, and learned he could get it done for about a tenth as much at Max Healthcare's Devki Devi Heart & Vascular Institute.

Things have not gone as Steinard expected. When surgeon Pradeep Chandra scanned Steinard's angiogram last week, he found the artery 90% blocked. "A stent is out of the question," he told Keigans. "Your father is going to need a double bypass, and he needs it immediately." The blood drained from Keigans' face. While she loved their plush hospital suite and the staff had been superb, this was all happening too far from home. Steinard, though, was blunt about his choices. It's either this, he said, or a fatal heart attack back home. The surgery last week was successful; the hospital's bill: $6,650.

"I'm not sure I'd ever want to come back to Delhi," says Keigans, "but I'll be telling everyone I know to come here if they need surgery. It's not just the price. They've made everything so easy for us."

Yet India is a developing country, and this can shake the confidence of even the most cavalier patient. First-class hotels are in short supply. Beyond that, the country's crumbling infrastructure and shocking income disparities--children pick through the garbage outside Steinard's hospital--make medical tourism seem a tad too adventurous for many. And for the litigious minded, good luck. The country's malpractice laws limit damage awards, one of many reasons that health care in India is cheaper.

But people don't have to be in Steinard's--or Miller's--straits before they cross borders for care. Retirees, especially the snowbirds who winter in South Texas and Arizona, have turned Mexican towns like Nuevo Progreso (pop. 9,125; dentists, 70), in the Lower Rio Grande Valley, and Los Algodones (pop. 15,000; doctors and dentists, 250), near Yuma, Ariz., into dusty dental centers. Los Algodones might rake in as much as $150 million during the winter season. People from Minnesota and California arrive in chartered planes to get their teeth fixed in these dental oases. Two California insurers, Health Net and Blue Shield, for the past few years have marketed popular health-insurance plans, aimed at Latinos, that charge lower premiums and cover treatment on both sides of the border.

Mexico's medical industry is just beginning to bubble; India's, like its other outsourcing segments, is booming. Apollo Hospitals, one of the largest private chains in the world with 46 hospitals in three countries, and Wockhardt Hospitals Group, which has eight hospitals in India, are working through agencies like IndUShealth, PlanetHospital and the Medical Tourist Co. in Britain to build business across the West.

Trehan plans to launch next year, in partnership with GE, the first installment of a vast, $250 million specialty Escorts hospital complex near New Delhi that will feature luxury suites, a hotel and swank restaurants for patients and their families. "We will be the Mayo Clinic of the East," he says. Max Healthcare is also planning a specialty complex in New Delhi (fields: neurologic, orthopedic, ob-gyn and pediatric).

A corresponding boom is taking place among Western agencies that funnel patients to Asia. Eight have popped up in Canada, where national health care can mean a yearlong wait for elective surgery. In the U.S. several firms are aiming at the roughly 61 million people who are uninsured or underinsured. PlanetHospital's founder, "Rudy" Rupak Acharya, says his agency, which in the past seven months has sent some 200 patients abroad, got 11,000 inquiries in March alone. He has just retained Mercer to help him develop an insurance plan for the uninsured that will combine primary and emergency care in the U.S. with surgery abroad.

Patrick Marsek, managing director of the agency MedRetreat, says his company sent 200 people abroad last year and is already processing 320 this year. He is demanding a deposit of $195 from customers because people posing as patients have been looking for information to start up their own agencies.

Will U.S. insurers join the party? Mohit Ghose of the trade group America's Health Insurance Plans says many have taken note of medical outsourcing but are scared off by the regulatory and legal uncertainties. Aaditya Mattoo, a World Bank economist who has published a study on the potential of medical outsourcing, suspects that pure institutional inertia has something to do with the lack of interest.

Yet as the medical-cost crisis deepens, the corporations who pay insurers are likely to find the lure of outsourcing as irresistible in health care as it is in software.

WAYNE STEINARD'S HEART WAS BROKEN ...

With no health insurance and lacking $60,000 for a badly needed operation, Steinard, a 59-year-old Floridian, hopped onto the Internet and then onto a plane to India ...

... 8,300 MILES LATER, IT'S FIXED

... and found out that he was closer to a heart attack than he had imagined. Steinard had a double bypass last week in New Delhi, where he is recovering CUTTING-EDGE VACATIONS In the U.S. insurers negotiate discounts, but the uninsured pay retail rates for medical procedures. Here's how the prices of one surgical tourism agency compare. Its packages include airfare and hospital and hotel rooms, but costs can climb if there are complications. [This article contains a table and a map. Please see hardcopy of magazine.]
Procedure U.S. Insurer's cost U.S. Retail price India Thailand Singapore Angioplasty $25,704 to $37,128 $57,262 to $82,711 11000 13000 13000 Gastric bypass $27,717 to $40,035 $47,988 to $69,316 11000 15000 15000 Heart bypass $54,741 to $79,071 $122,424 to $176,835 10000 12000 20000 Heart-valve replacement (single) $71,401 to $103,136 $159,326 to $230,138 9500 10500 13000 Hip replacement $18,281 to $26,407 $43,780 to $63,238 9000 12000 12000 Hysterectomy $9,591 to $13,854 $20,416 to $29,489 2900 4500 Knee replacement $17,627 to $25,462 $40,640 to $58,702 8500 10000 13000 Mastectomy $9,774 to $14,118 $23,709 to $34,246 7500 9000 12400 Spinal fusion $25,302 to $36,547 $62,778 to $90,679 5500 7000 9000

Sources: Subimo (U.S. rates, including at least one day of hospitalization); PlanetHospital (international rates)