Offshoring U.S. Patients No Cure for Ailing Healthcare System

For several years now, American healthcare consumers, including many from other western industrialized nations, have heard about elective surgeries being performed in lesser-developed nations and due to cost and denial of coverage by health insurance
 providers have opted to go there. However, surgeries in the past were truly elective and not medically necessary procedures that largely consisted of face-lifts, tummy tucks and gastric bypasses for cosmetic purposes.

But just in the past two years, American patients are being wooed to make decisions on serious medically necessary surgeries due to their fears of excessive healthcare costs. And the decision involves traveling abroad primarily to India and Thailand in order to receive such hospital care which they require.

For those self-insured, underinsured, or not insured at all, the desperation of receiving medical care without sacrificing homes or assets in the process is plausible, since costs of similar procedures in South Asia range from 75% - 80% less than in the United States. But now U.S. based corporations have entered the arena as well by encouraging employees to go to India and Thailand via cash incentives, free airfare and hotel stays with no co-pays due on the final bill.

Yet, just as with any large purchase consumers must look beyond the fancy advertisements and read the fine print with a Buyer Beware mentality. Americans have become quite adept at learning what to look for when dealing with car dealerships when purchasing an automobile and with computer retailers when purchasing a new computer. But it has taken many years to educate consumers as to their rights and protections under the law and what to do when something does go wrong.

 
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This article seems to be typical of those that rehash the litany of reasons not to take advantage of global healthcare options. While we are waiting for the US healthcare sytem to get fixed, the working uninsured need some sort of option. Check out the IndUShealth video at http://tinyurl.com/6owxl for an example of US patient that saved many thousands...

Posted on 07/13/2007 at 10:07:00 AM

Ms. Grassi: The choice is not between getting Heaalthcare locally or in India. the choice is dying or living. You have no clue about the cost of healthcare in this country. Please go to ehealthinsurance.com and apply for personal health insurance as a 36 year old female weighting 215 lb, 5 feet 1 inch tall with NO other medical problems ( a typical scenario if you are a snmall business owener like me and have women who need health insurance). You are lucky if you are even offered health insurance at any price! Just because a facility overseas is not accredited by JCAHO it does not mean it is of poor quality. Lot of overseas hospitals, particularly in India are staffed by highly trained surgeons who do single specialty, often single procedure surgery. These doctors are superb people with exposure to a wide variety of problems and have the ability to minimize complications. Due to the very nature of disease, occasional poor outcomes can happen anywhere including in JCAHO accredited US h

Posted on 11/20/2006 at 2:11:00 PM

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