You need to undergo a medical procedure, pronto. So you look around for the best, and most affordable, hospitals in your area. You even check out the ones across the country. Unfortunately, none of them fit your requirements — especially your budgetary ones.
With rising healthcare costs, what’s the average American citizen to do? One option is to become a medical tourist — that is, you fly to other countries and have your medical procedure performed there instead of in the United States. While this may seem like more trouble than it’s worth, it does have a number of benefits, and not just for the country receiving medical tourists. So-called medical tourism also provides benefits for you. For instance:
It’s Cheaper
Generally, healthcare services abroad cost only a fraction of their domestic counterparts. In India, for instance, you can get a heart bypass surgery for $5000— which is a steal, considering that similar procedures in the US can cost $150,000 or more. The fact that medical debt has become the number one reason why people file for bankruptcy in this country is troubling.
You could argue that lower prices translate to lower quality services. Actually, many overseas healthcare providers — such as India’s Apollo Hospitals — are accredited by the Joint Commission International. So before you check into any hospital abroad, make sure they’re accredited first.
It’s More Efficient
Let’s face it. The US health insurance system is ridiculously complex. To take full advantage of it, you need to know the subtle difference between terms like “deductible,” “co-payment,” and “co-insurance.” Otherwise, you’ll still have to shoulder a significant portion of your healthcare costs, which defeats the purpose of having insurance in the first place.
Fortunately, overseas hospitals don’t require you to have insurance. Since they want foreign patients to have an incentive to stay with them, they’re not likely to put too many barriers between you and the medical procedure you need. That’s why checking into those hospitals is a lot like checking into a hotel. You ask, stay, pay and leave. It’s that simple.
The Services Are At, or Above, Par
If you’re used to two-hour waits in US hospitals, wait until you visit countries like Thailand. In Bangkok’s Bumrungrad hospital, every floor has its own outpatient clinic and pharmacy, so waiting times can be as short as 15 minutes. Not bad for a country located halfway across the world!
It’s Still Covered by (Some) Insurance Companies
Many insurance companies are reluctant to offer services for medical tourists. After all, if a policyholder has a botched nose job abroad and wants to claim compensation here in America, that leads to a ton of messy legal problems.
Still, it’s worth looking for the companies that do offer the aforementioned services. Since medical tourism cut down annual health-related expenses by as much as $20 billion, many insurance providers decided to create products specifically for medical tourists. You can find some of them on the official website of the International Medical Travel Journal.
It’s a Great Opportunity to Travel
When you’re about to undergo a grueling operation, sightseeing might be the last thing on your mind. Still, you’ll want to make time for it.
For example, if you’re going to South Korea, a.k.a. the “plastic surgery mecca” of the world, you can drop by Jeju Island or Seoraksan National Park. If you’re going to Bangkok, you might as well check out the city’s famous temples and golden Buddhas. Or if you’re getting treated on a coastal region, hit the beach while waiting for those painkillers to wear off. No matter what country you’re in, you’ll appreciate these beautiful tourist spots, especially after spending days in a sickbed.
Final Thoughts
To be fair, there are drawbacks to being a medical tourist. If your overseas healthcare provider doesn’t live up to your expectations, you’ll have little recourse other than to fly back and have the operation re-done. And that’s assuming the healthcare provider in question will allow it.
But then, domestic healthcare has its risks, too. Pricey procedures aside, they also have to live up to your requirements. You can easily sue them if things go wrong, but lawyers aren’t exactly cheap either. Also be sure to start an emergency fund for medical emergencies if you haven’t already.
So regardless of the healthcare provider you use, always do your homework on them. Whether they’re located halfway across the country, or halfway across the globe, remember that they’re worth looking into, for your health’s sake.
Photo Credit: wattallan594
Alice says
I really like your post. Very nice. With the skyrocketing healthcare costs that we’re all suffering from now thanks to Obamacare, I think medical tourism is a great alternative. Sad to say, but it’s true. My premiums have more than doubled since that law was passed and the deductibles tripled!!! What’s the point of having insurance when the deductibles are $5000 per family member? Things were much better (and actually affordable) BEFORE than darn law was passed.
Len Penzo says
I feel your pain, Alice. Socialized medicine is a failure. Those who continue to believe the government can do things better than the private sector are deluding themselves.
Mike hudson says
Its really hard for one to cut down on medicines and hospitals bills. I can feel the pain of the people as my grandmother has been admitted twice in year to the nearby hospital and you can imagine the bills. Huge amount requires !!!
In this world doctors are making so much money…. $$$$
laurel loukx says
As a healthcare worker, I have first hand experience with the cost of healthcare. Doctors are making far less and yet are forced to charge more because insurance companies are taking a bigger chunk. Increasing premiums are a failure of privatization of healthcare and mega profits of insurance companies. The expense of education and stress of the profession will soon cause a doctor shortage.
Len Penzo says
Nope. If that was true how do explain decades of decreasing costs for elective medical procedures where the government is NOT involved like LASIK eye and cosmetic surgeries? I guarantee you if the government agreed to subsidize those areas of the medical profession, those price declines would be entirely reversed within five years.
You don’t have to be a healthcare worker to understand that increasing insurance premiums are caused by government involvement in the healthcare system. Obamacare greatly expanded government’s role in the healthcare system and premiums have only skyrocketed since then. In fact, my premiums were steady for many years prior to Obamacare, but then they doubled almost immediately upon its passage — and they were up seven-fold four years after it became law. But that’s to be expected; somebody has to pay for all of the additional people and subsidized services O-care foisted onto healthcare providers.
There is no such thing as a free lunch — and you can’t wish it so.
A free, unfettered market is the fastest way to make healthcare affordable again; not by forcing insurance companies to cover unrealistic/unprofitable benefits via government edict — or by increasing the size of the already-inefficient government health insurance bureaucracy that does nothing but impose unrealistic price limits on doctors and create costly red tape for insurance companies.
The LASIK and cosmetic surgery market proves that.
Ted says
Well said, Len! But there will always be people out there who believe government is the answer to all our problems.
I always tell people who prefer government run healthcare, to look at their local DMV or Social Security Office to see how good the government runs things. Why would anyone want their healthcare to be run by the same entity?