by: Christine Macguire
Medical Tourism is the practice of
traveling abroad to avail medical, dental,
or surgical care. The demand for offshore
treatment is all set to redefine the
landscape of medical practice. As the
average life span has seen an increase in
the affluent societies, individuals have
been compelled to resort to alternative
methods to take an economic approach. Added
to it are combinations of various factors,
such as
· Exorbitant costs of healthcare in
industrialized nations,
· The ease and affordability of traveling
abroad,
· Favorable currency exchange rates,
· Rapidly improving medical technology
and standards of care
· The ever-growing popularity of Internet
All these have led to the growth of the
medical tourism market.
The horizons of health tourism are no
more limited to traditional holiday
destinations such as France and Spain.
Eastern Europe has seen a huge increase in
people arriving for treatment, particularly
Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic,
while Britons are traveling to places as
far-flung as Latin America, South Africa and
South East Asia. With patients willing to
travel across the globe to get treatment
sooner and more cheaply than they could at
home, healthcare institutions see a huge
market for their services.
However, people traveling to far-off land
should take necessary precautionary
measures. They need to check out the doctors
and hospitals before they part with any
money. The Internet is a vast resource
carrying information about practitioners’
skills and experience and the amenities
available at the various healthcare
institutions. Patients should also find out
whether language can pose any problems or
not. A thorough cost comparison is also an
important issue to be put into the agenda.
While there are some horror stories and
quacks, the data are sparse and the evidence
does not support any broad-based significant
increase in risk.
India has emerged as one of the
forerunners in facilitating medical tourism
in the country. Now it is among the
well-known nations throughout the world for
high quality, low cost health care. Its
health care system--with well-equipped
modern clinics and hospitals, and medical
personnel trained in the finest
international teaching centers--provides
excellent medical service to patients from
abroad. Whether for elective procedures like
cosmetic plastic surgery, dental surgery or
life saving operations like bypass and heart
transplants, the Indian healthcare community
is experienced and ready to help.
Health tourism centers/clinics are
actively seeking First World ''customers''
by increasingly pursuing and adopting
American and other international best
practices to maintain the quality of
services. With a large pool of highly
trained doctors and low treatment prices,
healthcare aims to replicate the Indian
software sector's success. Healthcare
institutions in India are built on huge
areas of land often acquired at low rents
from ambitious authorities seeking to
promote business. These new and sleek
medical centers of excellence offer
developed world-class treatments at
developing world prices.
Medical Tourism or Healthcare tourism in
India has emerged as a profitable sector for
the nation. A number of private hospitals
also offer packages designed to attract
wealthy foreign patients, with
airport-to-hospital bed car service, in-room
Internet access, private chefs and an added
alternative therapy package or trip to the
historical and scenic spots. India is now
competing for the U.S. health care dollar,
and specializing in various sectors of
medicine and surgery to achieve its goal.
|