"Medical care in countries such as India, 
Thailand and Singapore can cost as little 
as 10 percent of the cost of comparable 
care in the United States," the report found.


NEW DELHI, India (CNN) -- "I was a walking time bomb. I knew I had to get on 
that plane if I wanted to be around to see my grandkids."

Sandra Giustina is a 61-year-old uninsured American. For three years she saved 
her money in hopes of affording heart surgery to correct her atrial 
fibrillation. "They [U.S. hospitals] told me it would be about $175,000, and 
there was just no way could I come up with that," Giustina said.

So, with a little digging online, she found several high quality hospitals 
vying for her business, at a fraction of the U.S. cost. Within a month, she was 
on a plane from her home in Las Vegas, Nevada, to New Delhi, India. Surgeons at 
Max Hospital fixed her heart for "under $10,000 total, including travel."

Giustina is just one of millions around the world journeying outside their 
native land for medical treatment, a phenomenon known as "medical tourism." 
Experts say the trend in global health care has just begun. 

Next year alone, an estimated 6 million Americans will travel abroad for 
surgery, according to a 2008 Deloitte study. "Medical care in countries such as 
India, Thailand and Singapore can cost as little as 10 percent of the cost of 
comparable care in the United States," the report found.

Companies such as Los Angeles-based Planet Hospital are creating a niche in the 
service industry as medical travel planners. One guidebook says that more than 
200 have sprung up in the last few years. 

"We find the best possible surgeons and deliver their service to patients 
safely, affordably and immediately," said Rudy Rupak, president of Planet 
Hospital. "No one should have to choose between an operation to save their life 
or going bankrupt."

Planet Hospital, which works with international clients as well as Americans, 
books patients' travel and arranges phone interviews with potential surgeons. 
Patients are greeted by a company representative at the airport in the country 
where they've chosen to be treated; a 24-hour personal "patient concierge" is 
also provided, a level of service that's standard among many of the top medical 
travel planning companies. 

"Our patient concierge was amazing," said Giustina. "He came to the hospital 
every day, gave us his personal [telephone] number and after my operation, he 
arranged private tours of India." 

Just two days post-op, Giustina and her husband, Dino, toured local markets and 
landmarks including the Presidential Palace and the Taj Mahal.

"I was able to fix my heart and tour India, which is something I thought I'd 
never do."

Walk through a patient wing at Max Hospital in New Delhi on any given day and 
you're likely to see people from around the world. In one visit, CNN met 
patients from the United Kingdom, Nigeria, Jordan, Afghanistan and the United 
States. They're alike in choosing surgery abroad, but their reasons differ.

Many South Asians and Africans said they travel abroad because they do not have 
access to care in their homeland.

Some Canadians and Europeans said they chose to travel aboard, despite having 
national health plans, because they are tired of waiting -- sometimes years -- 
for treatment.

Patients from the Middle East said they come to India because the technology as 
well as the staff is more advanced.

For most Americans CNN spoke to, it came down to finding the best value. "If I 
could have afforded my procedure in the United States, I would have taken it, 
but that was not my option," Giustina said. "I had to get online and look for a 
Plan B." 

The private hospitals in India market themselves as having upscale 
accommodations, Western-trained surgeons and state-of-the-art medical equipment.

CNN spent time at Max Healthcare in New Delhi and saw operating rooms similar 
to those in many U.S. hospitals. If fact, Max's neurosurgery room had an 
inter-operative MRI scanner, which is technology hardly seen at hospitals in 
the United States.

The lobby had marble floors, a book café, coffee station and a Subway sandwich 
shop. The patient suites were equipped with flat screen TVs, DVD players and 
Wi-Fi. This hospital also catered to families traveling together. The suites 
had adjoining rooms with a kitchenette, coffee maker and a sofa bed.

Max neurosurgeon Dr. Ajaya Jha said the hospital can provide high-quality care 
at low prices because the staff work hard to cut waste. 

"I've seen hospitals in the U.S. where they open up something costing $10,000 
and say, 'Oh it's not working. OK, give me another one.' We would never do that 
here. Even for 100 rupees (about $2) -- we would say, "Do we need to open this 
suture? Do we need to open this gauze?' We are very conscious of cost."

Hospital officials negotiate hard to keep costs low for high-tech medical 
machinery and other supplies, Jha said. "In the U.S. people are making careers 
out of carrying laptops and documenting things that are not really useful in 
the long term for the patient."

The salary of a U.S. surgeon is five times that of a surgeon in India. "We 
[surgeons in India] want to make a profit, but we don't want to profiteer. We 
don't want squeeze people and I think American industries should also think 
that way," Jha said.

Critics of medical tourism warn patients to be diligent when researching 
treatment aboard. "I've found that industry voices tend to crowd out those of 
us who are more cautious about the legal risks," said Nathan Cortez, assistant 
law professor at Southern Methodist University, who is conducting a case study 
investigating what legal recourse patients have outside America.

Patients don't think about their legal vulnerabilities, Cortez said. "Some 
countries limit patient access to medical records so they can't really learn 
what happened during the surgery. And a lot of practitioners in other countries 
just refuse to give you your medical records. So people have to weigh the risk 
versus benefits."

While most tourism patients from America are uninsured, major U.S. insurance 
companies are considering providing "medical tourism" coverage to their 
customers. Several have already launched pilot programs.

"I think what's really important about medical tourism is that you make the 
choice for what's right for you and what's important to them," said a spokesman 
for U.S. health insurer WellPoint Inc.

Experts say that every patient considering traveling abroad for surgery should 
inquire about postoperative care, legal rights and the safety standards and 
certifications of the hospital. Foreign health care providers should be willing 
to discuss the procedure and answer question ahead of time.

"What really helped me feel good about the process was that my doctor in the 
U.S. spoke to the cardiologist in India prior to my trip," said Giustina. "They 
were so open about everything; I knew I'd be in good hands."

Just weeks from returning from abroad, Giustina says she has only one regret, 
"I shouldn't have waited so long! I feel like a new person again, no more pain."

http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/03/27/india.medical.travel/








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