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  Medical Tourism: Global Competition in Health Care
by Devon M. Herrick ,  NCPA Study | 2007-11-01

Global competition is emerging in the health care industry.  Wealthy patients from developing countries have long traveled to developed countries for high quality medical care.  Now, a growing number of less-affluent patients from developed countries are traveling to regions once characterized as “third world.”  These patients are seeking high quality medical care at affordable prices.  Reports on the number of patients traveling abroad for health care are scattered, but all tell the same story.  An estimated 500,000 Americans traveled abroad for treatment in 2005.  A majority traveled to Mexico and other Latin American countries; but Americans were also among the estimated 250,000 foreign patients who sought care in Singapore, the 500,000 in India and as many as 1 million in Thailand.  The cost savings for patients seeking medical care abroad can be significant.  For example:

  • Apollo Hospital in New Delhi, India, charges $4,000 for cardiac surgery, compared to about $30,000 in the United States.
  • Hospitals in Argentina, Singapore or Thailand charge $8,000 to $12,000 for a partial hip replacement — one-half the price charged in Europe or the United States.
  • Hospitals in Singapore charge $18,000 and hospitals in India charge only $12,000 for a knee replacement that runs $30,000 in the United States.
  • A rhinoplasty (nose reconstruction) procedure that costs only $850 in India would cost $4,500 in the United States.

In 2006, the medical tourism industry grossed about $60 billion worldwide.  McKinsey & Company estimates this total will rise to $100 billion by 2012.

Global Health Care Industry | Medical Tourism | JCI | National Center for Policy Analysis


 
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