Category Archives: Health /Medical Treatment For Overseas Treatment

A video view of treatment

Doctors from Gurgaon come together to start pre-medical consultation over the web for overseas patients

To tap the potential of medical tourism in India, a group of doctors associated with some of the major private hospitals in Gurgaon have joined hands and launched a web portal to bridge the gap between them and their overseas patients planning to travel to India for treatment.

Based on a survey of multi-specialty hospitals, doctors and the experience of overseas patients, the web portal — www.OnlineOPD.com — allows overseas patients to choose a doctor for treatment from a panel and also schedule a video conference with him as a pre-medical consultation before actually flying to India for the treatment.

“At present, an overseas patient interested in treatment outside his country first approaches a medical agent and then travels to the destined country without any knowledge about the doctor, the costs involved and the kind of treatment needed for his ailment. We have come across cases where the medical agents misled the patients about the treatment costs involved and duped them. There have also been cases where the patient’s ailment was not serious enough and could be treated locally, but he travelled to India in absence of any pre-medical consultation. But such things are bound to change with this portal. The patient can now upload his medical reports on the portal to be assessed by the doctor, can actually speak to him through video-conferencing and come prepared for the treatment,” said Dr. Sanjay Verma, a well-known eye-surgeon, who is also the brain behind the idea.

As transparency and convenience are integral to the success of any business venture, the portal has been equipped with a real-time language converter tool and an in-built system to record the video conferences for any future reference. “Language should not be a barrier to get the best possible pre-medical consultation and so the new portal gives the freedom to the caller to talk in a language of his choice from among 200 languages. And the whole video conference would be recorded and saved on our servers within 24 hours for later viewing. It brings transparency to the whole exercise,” said Dr. Verma.

Going beyond the medical treatment alone, the Online OPD team also offers to take care of the travel and lodging of their patients flying in for treatment. “Patients can now concentrate on their speedy recovery and stop worrying as for everything else, the Online OPD team would take care of,” added Dr. Verma.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> Health / by Ashok Kumar / May 27th, 2012

Expansion of Healthy Destination Locations Boosts Traveling4Health And Retirement Brand and Market Share

In response to surge of interest in international living destinations driven by economic climate, Traveling4Health and Retirement has expanded their coverage of destination locations resulting in increased branding and market share for Traveling4Health and Retirement and its advertisers. International living and medical travel destinations are a favorable option for more and more retirees, nine to fivers, and tourist aficionados; and the changes in economic climate have reinvigorated interests in affordable global travel.

Seattle, WA (PRWEB) May 16, 2012

Traveling4Health&Retirement announces the expansion of their interactive destination locator map to include even more countries and cities popular with expats and that also provide high-quality medical and social infrastructure to support healthy living.

Traveling4Health&Retirement represents the changing perceptions of Baby Boomers and Travelers of all ages towards considering internatinal living as a viable option for a more fulfilling lifestyle.

An advocate for living a fully healthful lifestyle, Traveling4Health&Retirement spotlights the growing numbers of holistic and technological resources news markets and travelers access for informative, contextualized subject expert resource information. The informative exchange expands the traveler ecosystem: greater options for exceptional lifestyles.

The decision with travelers today is not how costly a vacation or destination trip may be but how can it be made affordable. The modern retiree, expatriate, or baby boomers-to-be embark today on a new excursion – finding alternative travel resolutions for an increasingly enriched lifestyle.

Traveling4Health&Retirement expands the global travel ecosystem with timely subject news and leading travel and medical tourism opportunities by preparative subject expert collaboration. Traveling4Health&Retirement embodies the pinnacle of travel and destination travel selections for the savvy and emotive novice.

Macarena Rose, Professionally Certified International Property Specialist from the National Association of Realtors, shares the importance of sourcing researched, preparative travel curatorship. “… People fail to make a new life overseas [because] frankly they left their good sense at home.” Rose, a subject personality expert in travel and host of “Don’t Leave Your Brain @ the Border” on Overseas Radio Network, presents dedicated travel information to persons interested in destination living in Belize.

Radio personality and travel subject expert Ilene Little, host of “ Know Before You Go” Overseas Radio Network program, encapsulates the many choices and considerations of travelers exploring destination locations internationally. “To share information, experience, inspiration and to help Americans better understand their health and wellness options, whether traveling for medical treatment or retiring overseas, our radio program has become an exciting tool for us in the field of travel.”

The changes in economic environments have paved the way for inventive and affordable travel. “Know Before You Go,” the Overseas Radio program and the Traveling4Health&Retirement online have opened up the platform for communication amongst travelers seeking healthy living environments for careers and retirement.

Ilene Little’s travel destination and medical news website “Travel4Health&Retirement” has increased American news and web markets readership about affordable and healthy international travel with recognition in the  San Francisco Chronicle and baby boomers and lifestyle blog from  AARP.

The definitive source in destination locations, international lifestyle, and global health, Traveling4Health&Retirement relates the newest developments, advancements, and achievements in vacationing, retirement and destination travel. Travelers, medical professionals, and people desiring to learn more about Traveling4Health&Retirement’s growing user community and health providers may visit Traveling4Health&Retirement at http://www.Traveling4Health.com .  Persons or care providers interested in becoming a member with Traveling4Health&Retirement’s online community should contact Ilene Little at +1.888.844.1005; Fax: +1.888.844.1005; Skype at Ilene.Little for additional information.

For the original version on PRWeb visit:http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2012/5/prweb9508374.htm

source: http://www.chron.com / Home> PRWeb / Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

Surgery abroad an option for those with minimal health coverage

Bruce Pearson was leading a gardening tour in Thailand early last year when his chronic back pain got so bad that his friends convinced him to check into a local hospital.

After half a day in a private room with the doctor himself massaging his sore back, Mr. Pearson, like any good American, shuddered to think what his bill would be.

The bottom line? $12.

In December, the Boynton Beach, Fla., nursery owner was told by his American doctors that he would need spinal fusion surgery. The price he was quoted was close to $70,000, and under his American States individual health insurance policy, he would be responsible for $14,000 of the tab.

So Thailand beckoned again.

This time, Mr. Pearson, who just turned 60, checked in to the sleekly modern Bumrungrad International Hospital in Bangkok, where he received a less radical form of spinal surgery that has made him feel like a new man.

The second bottom line? For the surgery, a four-day hospital stay, an extra week in a recuperation center and round-trip plane tickets for himself and a partner, the total bill came to just under $7,000.

Bruce Pearson had thus become a willing volunteer in of one of the fastest-growing trends in modern health care — “medical tourism,” or going overseas for cheaper medical treatment.

While no one officially tracks the phenomenon, the statistics at Bumrungrad International give a sense of how fast it is growing.

Last year, Bumrungrad treated 58,000 American patients, 70 percent of whom traveled there especially for such procedures as hip and knee replacement, angioplasty and prostate removal, said spokesman Ruben Toral. That was 25 percent more U.S. patients than it treated in 2004, he said, and so far this year, American patients are running 20 percent above last year’s figures.

Medical tourism has existed for years, but until recently, it mainly consisted of Americans traveling abroad for cosmetic surgery, or wealthy foreigners coming to the U.S. for organ transplants and other advanced medical procedures.

Today, however, travel to India, Thailand, Malaysia and Latin America for medical care is being driven by Americans who don’t have health insurance or have only minimal coverage.

A report by the U.S. Census Bureau last month said that the number of Americans with no health insurance climbed nearly 3 percent in 2005 to 46.6 million.

While many of those people are the working poor, “what doesn’t often come out is that 15 million of those people have family incomes of at least $85,000 a year,” said Thomas Keesling, founder of IndUShealth, a North Carolina agency that is routing American patients to India.

Many of those folks are self-employed business owners such as Bruce Pearson, or professionals who have been denied insurance coverage because of pre-existing conditions, or employees who are being asked to bear an increasing share of their companies’ health insurance premiums.

At some companies, the typical premium for a family of four is $11,000 a year, and employees are being asked to pick up 25 percent to 30 percent of that amount, so that “you’re out several thousand dollars before you even draw on the health care delivery system for anything,” said Paul Mango, head of the North American health care practice at consulting firm McKinsey & Co.

Mr. Pearson’s policy requires him to pay the first $5,000 of his medical costs and 20 percent of the remainder up to $50,000, after which catastrophic coverage kicks in. At Bumrungrad, he had to pay his fee in cash ahead of time, but given the outcome and the savings, he was more than happy to do that.

He is far from alone. Attracted by the growing number of foreign hospitals with highly qualified surgeons and much lower costs, many underinsured Americans are contacting medical tourism travel agencies to arrange such trips.

One of the newer agencies is Medical Tourism of Costa Rica, set up about a year ago by former Pittsburgher Richard Feldman.

Mr. Feldman, who lived in Point Breeze for 14 years, knows he can’t quite match the medical treatment costs in Asia, but he can offer a plane trip of just three to four hours from the United States, compared with 20 hours to India or Thailand.

And he notes there are still significant savings for patients who go to Costa Rican hospitals for dentistry or weight loss and cosmetic surgeries.

Gastric bypass surgery there, for instance, costs $16,000, he said, so that even with another $2,500 added in to cover plane fare, food, transportation and hotel, it is still a major savings over the $35,000 an American hospital might charge.

Medical fees in Costa Rica are lower not only because of the cheaper cost of living, Mr. Feldman said, but because the country cares for its poorer patients in public hospitals, so the private hospitals that cater to tourists don’t have to pass along the cost of that care.

Malpractice expenses also are much lower. People can file claims in Costa Rican courts, he said, but they generally are encouraged to settle rather than go to trial.

The story in Bangkok is similar.

At Bumrungrad Hospital, Mr. Toral said, the lower cost of living is a major factor in the savings, but so are differences in how the medical system operates.

Doctors in Thailand pay about $5,000 a year for malpractice insurance, compared with more than $100,000 for some specialties in the United States.

Thai courts will adjudicate malpractice claims, but the largest award ever issued was about $100,000, Mr. Toral said, and the law there doesn’t permit damages for pain and suffering.

Another major savings, he said, is that Bumrungrad doesn’t have to spend much on processing insurance claims, since 75 percent of its patients pay cash.

“You can come to our hospital and pay for major surgery on your credit card,” he said. “You could never do that in the states.”

Bumrungrad also likes to promote its quality.

The hospital is accredited by the international branch of the same organization that accredits U.S. hospitals, Mr. Toral said, and 145 of its doctors are board-certified or were trained in the United States, United Kingdom or Germany.

While it’s true that most foreign nations seeking medical tourists don’t offer the kind of malpractice settlement possibilities that the United States does, that doesn’t mean they have less incentive to provide high-quality care, industry executives say.

The hospitals “understand that if something negative was said about them in the U.S., it would have a big impact on their ability to serve the North American market,” said Patrick Marsek, managing director of MedRetreat, a medical tourism agency based in Maryland.

Rick Wade, senior vice president for communication at the American Hospital Association, said he has no doubt that some international hospitals are just as high-quality as their U.S. counterparts.

But he believes most Americans will not end up going overseas for medical care. “It will be limited by the desire of people to be someplace near to where their family and their social support system is,” he said.

Still, Mr. Wade said the economic forces that are driving some people to go abroad for medical care are very real and need to be fixed.

While the hospital association doesn’t support a single-payer health insurance system such as Canada’s, it does believe there should be a system in America that “would make some kind of basic health insurance affordable and available to everybody.”

Until that happens, thousands of Americans will seek care overseas.

Soon, some employers and commercial insurance companies may start to consider overseas care as a lower-cost alternative to U.S. hospitals — in effect, “outsourcing” expensive medical procedures.

IndUShealth, the North Carolina agency, is talking with 12 employers and two insurance companies about possible coverage of overseas health care costs, Mr. Keesling said. One of the companies, employee-owned Blue Ridge Paper Co., of Canton, N.C., was planning to send its first worker to get surgery in India this month, he said.

In West Virginia, Republican legislator Ray Canterbury has proposed allowing state employees to go overseas for health care if they want, as long as the cost, including travel and accommodations, is less than the expense in the United States.

The bill is in a special study committee that will take it up next year. Mr. Canterbury hopes that the state legislature will at least approve a pilot program testing overseas care.

Medical tourism executives and consultants agreed that international travel for health care will probably accelerate in coming years.

“I tell people these are actually the good old days in health care,” Mr. Keesling said. “With all the baby boomers aging, it’s going to put a tremendous burden on the health care system that we can’t begin to imagine.”

Arnold Milstein, chief physician for Mercer Health and Benefits in San Francisco, agreed, but he cautioned that medical tourism by itself is unlikely to lead to major changes in the American health care system.

He said actuaries at his consulting firm estimate that the maximum potential for patients going overseas still amounts to only 1 or 2 percent of all U.S. surgeries — not enough to force an upheaval in the way health care is financed in this country.

Nevertheless, Bruce Pearson has no trouble recommending Thailand to anyone facing major surgery.

“I don’t know how U.S. medicine can even compete. They don’t have the high wages there, the Thais are caring and incredibly enthusiastic, and I can’t say enough good things about the four doctors I had.

“I mean, when I was in the hospital there, my biggest worry was whether I should have the lobster salad or the thinly sliced tuna in red wine sauce.”

Mark Roth can be reached at mroth@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1130.
source: http://www.post-gazette.com / Pittsburg Post-Gazette / by Mark Roth / first published March 17th, 2012

CLUB MED

This year, a few hundred thousand intrepid American travellers will head to places like Thailand and Costa Rica, in search of something that they can’t find in the United States. They won’t be looking for Mayan ruins or ancient Buddhist temples, but something a bit more practical: affordable medical care. These medical tourists will be getting root canals, knee surgeries, and hip replacements at foreign hospitals. If health-care costs in the U.S. keep rising—and especially if Obamacare is overturned by the Supreme Court—more of us may soon be joining them.

For decades, wealthy people from developing countries have come here for care, but these days medical tourists travel all over the world. And while it’s hard to disentangle the stats from the hype—a number of countries portray themselves as favored destinations—it’s clear that millions of people are now doing this. The Bumrungrad hospital, in Bangkok, treats four hundred thousand foreign patients annually. Malaysia had almost six hundred thousand medical tourists last year. And South Korea had more than a hundred thousand, nearly a third of them American.

For Americans, the attraction is obvious: medical care is a lot cheaper abroad. At CIMA Hospital, in Costa Rica, for instance, hip-replacement surgery costs around fifteen thousand dollars, roughly a sixth of the average here. So far, though, various factors have kept a lid on demand. Logistics can be challenging, and insurance companies have been leery about reimbursements for care overseas: they already get big discounts with U.S. hospitals, and they risk a public-relations disaster anytime something goes wrong abroad. Above all, patients have been wary. We trust the quality of foreign-made televisions and cars, but we haven’t taken that leap when it comes to foreign doctors. People worry about the lack of legal recourse, and the sheer unfamiliarity of medical tourism makes people hesitant to try it. A few years ago, the grocery-store chain Hannaford set up a partnership for the benefit of its employees with a well-accredited Singaporean hospital. Singapore is one of the most prosperous countries in the world, but medical care there is still significantly cheaper than in the U.S., so the arrangement looked like a model for how medical tourism might work. But none of Hannaford’s workers were interested in going to Singapore.

There are a host of forces that could change this. The quality of medical facilities in developing countries has risen dramatically, and the private hospitals that cater to tourists often feature technologies similar to those in American hospitals. (This has its problematic side: many of these high-end hospitals are in countries where citizens struggle to get basic care.) Furthermore, new companies are making treatment abroad easier and more attractive. Blue Cross/Blue Shield has started a company called Companion Global Healthcare, which connects patients with hospitals around the world. Political events could also quickly make medical tourism considerably more attractive. If Obamacare is overturned, forty million Americans without insurance will stay that way. If Medicaid and Medicare are cut sharply, the cost of American health care will eventually become prohibitive to many senior citizens. And if health-care costs keep soaring fewer employers will offer health insurance. That doesn’t mean that Americans are soon going to jet halfway around the world for an ingrown toenail, but it’s easy to envisage regional systems becoming common, with Americans heading to places like Costa Rica and Mexico, and Western Europeans going to places like Hungary and Turkey.

If more Americans sought care abroad, it wouldn’t just save them money; it could also help control medical costs at home. Medical tourism can be considered a kind of import: instead of the product coming to the consumer, as it does with cars or sneakers, the consumer is going to the product. More medical tourism would increase free trade in medical services, something there has not been much of in the past. The U.S. has been religious about breaking down barriers to free trade, especially in manufacturing and service industries, exposing ordinary workers to foreign competition. But health care has been insulated from the forces of globalization. This has been great for hospitals and doctors, but less good for consumers. It’s one reason that the cost of health care has risen so much faster than that of almost everything else.

It has been generally assumed that medicine is inherently a local business. But that would change if we allowed Medicare and Medicaid funds to be spent in foreign hospitals, or if insurers cut consumers in on the savings from treatment abroad. And if domestic hospitals actually had to compete with places like Bumrungrad or CIMA, the way American car companies have to compete with Toyota and Honda, they might be forced to become more efficient. Even an increase in domestic medical tourism—people journeying to lower-cost U.S. hospitals, like the Cleveland Clinic—would help. There are other ways to bring free trade to medicine, too. As the economist Dean Baker has argued, making it easier for foreign doctors who met standardized requirements to practice in the U.S. would hold down costs and improve service. In addition to exporting patients, we could import doctors. Politically speaking, of course, this all seems improbable, because the medical industry is a powerful lobby and uninterested in competition. But the reality is that, unless we find some other way to rein in health-care costs, the logic of free trade in medicine is going to become harder to resist. ♦

ILLUSTRATION: CHRISTOPH NIEMANN

source: http://www.newyorker.com / The Talk of the Town> The Financial Page / by James Surowiecki / April 14th (16th), 2012

Readmore http://www.newyorker.com/talk/financial/2012/04/16/120416ta_talk_surowiecki#ixzz1s1OiR7Ya

NRG doc prescribed A’bad treatment to Zambian prez

Ahmedabad:


Gujaratis in Zambia and other African countries are proving to be the unofficial PR agents for medical tourism in the state. Take the case of Zambian President Michael Sata who has been admitted to Samved Hospital for treatment.

Sources in the know said that it was an NRG doctor who had helped the medical team attending on the president zero in on the doctor and the particular hospital in Gujarat where he could be.

Sata was in the city for a urology procedure. “The president’s team had considered hospitals in the UK and the US apart from those in the big cities of India like Mumbai and Delhi. But eventually they zeroed in on a doctor and a hospital in Ahmedabad,” said a source.

The source further said that a Gujarati physician had helped the president’s team zero in on Dr Janak Desai. The good word that Gujaratis in Zambia put in about the private healthcare system in Gujarat also helped.

The source further said that, in this particular case, Gujarat was not chosen for its affordability. The cost of treatment was never a consideration as the president could have afforded to get himself treated anywhere in the world, the source said.

“It was the favourable reports from Gujaratis in Zambia about the doctor and the private health care system in Gujarat that helped the president’s team take the decision. The Gujarati physician’s input also helped,” said the source.

When contacted, Dr Janak Desai, chief urologist at Samved Hospital, refused to comment on either Sata’s ailments or why the president had chosen to come to Gujarat.

“It is against medical ethics for a doctor to reveal the health details of a patient,” said Dr Desai.

A source further said that, initially, Dr Desai and his team were to operate on the president in Zambia but later the premier’s team decided that he should get the procedure done here.

source: http://www.DailyBhaskar.com / Home> Gujarat> Ahmedabad / by Smitha R., DNA / Monday, April 09th, 2012