Category Archives: Healthcare Service Providers

Latin America’s Top Health Care Haven

Health care, both the quality and the cost, is a prime concern for anyone approaching retirement. Some retirees are moving abroad in order to get access to top-notch health care at affordable prices.

Here’s the good news: You have an excellent option for arranging access to world class medical care that is as good or better than services you could get from the best facilities in the U.S. And most health care facilities overseas charge just a fraction of the cost of similar care in the U.S.

Doctors in the U.S. struggle with high overheads and insurance costs, while trying to keep the drug companies happy and fend off personal injury lawyers. The patient often takes a back seat to all these conflicting agendas. The improvement in the quality of care can be dramatic when only the doctor and the patient are involved in the doctor-patient relationship.

Cuenca, Ecuador for example, is one of the world’s top places to consider retiring overseas for many reasons, most notably this city’s excellent health care system. The cost of care in this city is so low that it’s a place where you could go without health insurance, if you chose, and pay for care as you need it. I know several retired Americans in Cuenca who have taken this approach and been very happy with their decision.

Cuenca is becoming a popular city for medical tourism, and has begun offering city-sponsored programs. Cuenca’s five top hospitals have joined together to offer a package deal. The medical tourist (or retiree) is provided with an ID card that entitles you to a package of exams at standard prices at the facility of your choice. You sign up for the bundle of medical services that best suits your needs. Prices range from $66 to $401 for the entire suite. Here are some examples:

  • Mammogram: $40
  • Chest X-ray: $25
  • PSA test: $15
  • Cholesterol workup (Cholesterol, HDL, LDL, and triglycerides): $8
  • EKG: $25
  • EEG: $60

One important advantage of medical care in Ecuador is that the results and records belong to the patient. The doctor delivers them to you, along with any recommendation, and you can do as you please, easily going somewhere else for follow-up or treatment if you like. Your medical tourist card also entitles you to hotel and travel discounts throughout the city, including things like hot springs and massages. You can see the city, while getting a great check-up at a low price.

Even if you’re not part of this program, your costs for health care services can be very low. A hospital stay in a semi-private room at Santa Ana Hospital is just $30. A private room with an extra bed for family members is $50, while a private suite is $75, including meals, but not doctor fees or medications.

A friend recently had a minor surgery performed at this facility. The total cost was $90, including the outpatient surgery, office visit, local anesthesia, and supplies. In addition, he paid $20 for associated lab work, bringing the total to $110. My friend had the exact same procedure performed in Arizona in 2011. The total cost there was $5,190. After insurance, his portion of the bill came to $347. It cost 300 percent more to have the same procedure performed with insurance in the U.S. than it cost to undergo the procedure without insurance in Ecuador.

Going without health insurance can be frightening and certainly isn’t for everyone. If you would prefer to carry insurance, coverage can be extremely inexpensive in Cuenca. For example, premiums cost less than $60 per month for complete coverage for a 60-year-old male.

Retirees considering a move overseas should also make sure each place provides nursing home care in case it is eventually needed. Many countries simply don’t provide assisted living facilities to a standard the typical North American retiree is probably looking for. Cuenca is an exception. In this city you will find good nursing home care at an affordable price. The total cost for a clean, professionally staffed facility where the residents are well cared for can be $450 per month, including 24-hour doctor and nurse attendance, food, laundry, personal care, and occupational or rehabilitative therapy.

Kathleen Peddicord is the founder of the Live and Invest Overseas publishing group. With more than 25 years experience covering this beat, Kathleen reports daily on current opportunities for living, retiring, and investing overseas in her free e-letter. Her book,  ‘How To Retire Overseas- Everything You Need To Know To Live Well Abroad for Less’ was recently released by Penguin Books.

source: http://www.money.usanews.com / Home> Money> On Retirement / by Kathleen Peddicord / March 26th, 2012

Global Health Voyager to Offer HIPPA-Compliant Medical Records Storage to Medical Tourists

Global Health Voyager Partners With Janus to Provide Medical Travelers and Domestic Patients Secure Records Transfer

LOS ANGELES, CA–(Marketwire – Mar 20, 2012) – Medical tourism facilitator Global Health Voyager (OTCBB: GLHV) has announced a new data partnership to provide medical tourists with HIPPA-compliant records storage. Through an exclusive contract with Janus Medical Systems, Global Health Voyager will offer its patients and members the ability to store their entire family’s medical records in one secure place. This new service is an extension of Global Health Voyager’s offerings to patients who wish to exercise more control over their healthcare options. The software is market-ready and the Company expects to make it available to patients within weeks.

The primary concern is the security and confidentiality of users’ information. All medical data will be stored with state-of-the-art security and encryption technology to protect users’ data. Records are stored on servers which are housed in HIPAA compliant data centers in the USA. Each account is secured by a unique combination of User ID and password.

In addition to passwords and data encryption, data access is protected through multiple levels of network security to prevent unauthorized access and to help protect the privacy and integrity of customer data. Global Health Voyager employees do not have access to any information placed into the system by our customers. The service will be offered for free to patients with qualifying medical procedures and on a scaled pricing model for member patients.

“The firm specializes in matching medical patients with accredited foreign hospitals offering standardized surgical procedures at lower cost. These can range from minor cosmetic surgery to less expensive fertility treatments, dental surgery or hip, knee and heart valve replacement,” said Ali Moussavi, CEO of Global Health Voyager.

The new alliance between GLHV and Janus, a data storage provider, adds convenience and extra security to the transfer of client medical records. “You can log procedures, meds, allergies, doctors, history, lab results — all in a very user-friendly and organized format. Records are shared easily in whole or part with anyone you choose by supplying a temporary password and can be done from a computer or smartphone. In addition to records, images such as x-rays and scans can be stored as well.”

He notes that one membership allows medical records for an entire family to be stored at no additional cost.

“We continually bring top-rated medical facilities into our worldwide network,” he adds. “And while the attraction of medical tourism centers around medical care and cost savings and quality care, we are continuing on our pledge to add more value to the patient experience and access to secure storage of personal and family records is a key element of what we are offering our patients.”

Industry figures show steady growth in medical tourism worldwide as patients take greater control over their medical decisions, says Moussavi. “They are aware of available domestic and international options — and in many cases after weighing the cost, recovery time, and quality of service it clearly benefits them to have a procedure done elsewhere.”

“We’re here to broaden those medical choices and to make savings possible.”

source: http://www.MarketWire.com / March 20th, 2012

Medical Tourism in Mexico

More information at www.mexicandentalvacation.com. Enjoy dental tourism in a neat, sanitary office with a full range of procedures at 50% of the cost in the United States. And do it all in beautiful Mazatlan, Mexico.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

A BBC report on dental tourism with one of our patients and with Dr. Bela Batorfi, Master of Implantology of British Hungarian Medical Service.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

Indraprastha Apollo Hospitals New Delhi: India Medical Tourism, Healthbase

Indraprastha Apollo Hospitals in New Delhi is a multi-specialty JCI accredited hospital. Check out the video to see the facilities, patient wards, operating rooms, etc. of Apollo Hospitals Delhi. Healthbase arranges affordable medical tourism trips to Apollo Hospitals Delhi for uninsured and undersinsured Americans, Canadians and others seeking low cost high quality treatments such as heart bypass surgery (multiple CABG or coronary artery bypass graft), aortic aneurysm repair, valve replacement or repair, ACL repair, spinal fusion, etc. The cost of care at Apollo Delhi is a fraction of the cost of similar care in the United States with the quality on par or superior to what is available in the United States. For more information about affordable treatments log on to www.healthbase.com.

Sports Injuries, Treatments and Medical Tourism

Sports injuries are inevitable when indulging in physically demanding or contact sports. So much so that there is an altogether separate branch of medicine dedicated to the treatment of sports injuries and is called sports medicine. While minor wounds can heal in a few days or weeks, major ones may require surgical attention. However, just like any other surgery, surgical treatment of sports injuries may be expensive in the United States and other Western countries. But thanks to medical tourism, now these treatments can be obtained for cheap.

Injuries are an inevitable part of playing any sport, be it tennis, squash, football, baseball, hockey, cycling, golf or any other. Just like defeats don’t stop an athlete from moving on, physical injuries should not prevent you from playing sports because there almost always is a way to treat the injury and even major injuries can now be treated affordably through medical tourism.

TYPES OF INJURIES

Sports injuries may range from bruises and muscle strains, to fractures and head injuries. The most common sports injuries are:

Ligament sprains and muscle strains

Swollen muscles

Knee injuries (torn meniscus, runner’s knee or patellofemoral pain syndrome, jumper’s knee, articular surface problems, problems with the kneecap)

Knee ligament injuries (torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), torn posterior cruciate ligament (PCL), torn medial collateral ligament (MCL))

Shoulder injuries (rotator cuff tears, glenoid labrum tear)

Tendon injuries (Achilles tendon injuries, DeQuervain’s syndrome or washerwoman’s sprain or mother’s wrist)

Pain along the shin bone (shin splints)

Bone fractures (scaphoid fracture, hip fracture)

Dislocations (shoulders, fingers, knees, wrists, elbows)

Spine injuries (herniated disk, sciatica, lumbar spinal stenosis)

TREATMENT OPTIONS

To accelerate the overall healing process it’s important that the initial phase (inflammatory phase) of the injury be minimized with the initial treatments. Treatment often begins with the RICE (Rest, Ice, Compression, and Elevation) regime to relieve pain, reduce swelling and speed healing. Other possible treatments include pain relievers, keeping the injured area from moving, rehabilitation and sometimes surgery.

SURGICAL TREATMENT OF INJURIES

Surgery is recommended when the more conservative methods of healing and physical therapy have failed to relieve pain and restore normal function. Based on the site and extent of injury and evaluation by your doctor, the surgical approach used could be traditional or laparoscopic (keyhole).

The most common surgeries to treat sports-related injuries are:

Knee replacement (total or partial)

ACL repair or reconstruction

Meniscectomy

Arthroscopic surgery (knee arthroscopy, shoulder arthroscopy, spinal arthroscopy, wrist arthroscopy, ankle arthroscopy, hip arthroscopy)

Tendon repair surgery

Laminectomy or laminotomy

Discectomy or microdiscectomy

Bone fracture repair surgery

Hip replacement

Hip hemiarthroplasty

Birmingham hip resurfacing

Spinal decompression surgery

MEDICAL TOURISM AND SURGERY

If you are insured, your insurance may cover the cost of surgery. But if you have to pay for the surgery out of pocket it may cost you a fortune to have the surgery in the US. Therefore, Americans are increasingly shopping for surgical care in other countries – medical tourism – where the cost of surgery is much less while at the same time the quality offered is superior to what is available in the US.

When William Nilsson, an uninsured American, sustained knee injuries while playing football and tore his knee ligaments while playing golf, he resorted to an Indian hospital to get a total knee replacement surgery so he could return to his sports hobbies. Assisted by Healthbase, a medical tourism facilitator based in Boston, he managed to have his surgery for ,500. The same surgery in the US would have cost him between ,000 and ,000.

Similarly, Daniel Biggs broke a tendon in his hand when playing golf. He had his tendon repair surgery coordinated by Healthbase in Panama for which he paid ,500 – a price that was a mere 20% of what he was quoted in the United States.

These are just two examples of the hundreds and thousands of people traveling overseas to seek affordable health care for sports-related injuries as well as non-sports related conditions. Countries such as Mexico, Panama, Costa Rica and India are popular medical tourism destinations for such treatments.

Price differential is the leading factor for the popularity of medical tourism. Other benefits of using medical tourism are access to high quality and immediate care. You may find more information about affordable medical tourism on the Healthbase website.

The author works for Healthbase (www.healthbase.com), a medical tourism facilitator that connects patients to high quality surgical and non-surgical healthcare and dental care abroad for a fraction of cost in the US, Canada and UK.