사이드바 영역으로 건너뛰기

Globalisation and health care: Operating porfit

 

EM님의 [Globalisation and Health Care] 에 관련된 글.

 

원문을 찾아봄.  이전에 일종의 개그라고 생각되었던 5천만 프로젝트가 생각났다.

암튼 돈되는 거라면 어떠한 논리든 만들어낸다.

이런 상황에서...누가 그랬다. 이제 무상의료란 담론의 힘빨이 다했다고...

그리고 운동진영의 일각에서 이른바 '적정모델'을 운동화하려는 움직임이 있다.

조만간 물밖으로 나올 것이다.

 

건강검진을 주요하게 상품화 시키고 있는 의료컨설팅회사의 CEO는 '자기 회사의 매출액이 늘수록 전체 사회의 의료비는 줄어든다'라고 자신있게 말한다.

 

이래저래 머리속이 복잡하다.

 

 

 

Globalisation and health care

Operating profit

Aug 14th 2008 | NEW YORK
From The Economist print edition

Why put up with expensive, run-of-the-mill health care at home when you can be treated just as well abroad?

Jonas Bergstrand

ROBIN COOK knows how to spot the latest scare in medicine. Mr Cook, a Harvard-trained doctor, is author of over a dozen medical thrillers, including “Coma” and “Outbreak”, which have anticipated pandemics, anthrax attacks and the black market in organs. “Foreign Body”, published this month, is about the next big thing: medical tourism.

Central to the plot is the story of Maria Hernandez, a working-class American woman who travels to Delhi to get a hip replacement she could not afford back home. Alas, she and other medical tourists die in mysterious circumstances. Contrast Ms Hernandez’s fate with that of another American health tourist, Robin Steele. Mr Steele, a real patient, recently went to India’s Wockhardt hospital chain for a heart operation. Not only is he in fine shape, but he also enjoyed a holiday afterwards and saved several thousand dollars to boot. 

Mrs Hernandez’s tragedy may sell books, but Mr Steele’s good health is more typical. The future of health care, long one of the most local of all businesses, promises to be increasingly global. Over the next few years the world is likely to see a lot more investment, medical staff and patients crossing borders—bringing economic benefits and greater access to care as they do so. Even a modest surge in global medical tourism could prove a powerful catalyst for government bureaucracies and sclerotic American health-maintenance organisations to think afresh about what they do. It may even introduce competition to private health care in America and elsewhere.

Globalisation is not new to medicine. The outsourcing of record-keeping and the remote transcription of doctors’ notes and X-ray analysis are becoming common. Jagdish Bhagwati, an economist at Columbia University, thinks that the offshoring of, for instance, customer service and claims-processing could save America alone $70 billion-75 billion a year. In recent years leading American hospitals such as the Mayo Clinic and Johns Hopkins have set up offshoots in the Middle East and Asia.

Some wealthy patients have always travelled for fancy medical care. Denis Cortese, head of the Mayo Clinic, in rural Minnesota, observes that “we have been global for a hundred years.” A few years ago Britons fed up with waiting for elective surgery started heading overseas to get joints replaced or cosmetic surgery—sometimes at government expense. Recently, shorter queues in the National Health Service and restrictions on reimbursements have undermined this trend.

However, globe-trotting patients only ever occupied a niche. What is getting people excited today is the promise of a boom in mass medical tourism, as a much bigger group of middle-class Americans prepares to take the plunge. A report published last month by Deloitte, a consultancy, predicts that the number of Americans travelling abroad for treatment will soar from 750,000 last year to 6m by 2010 and reach 10m by 2012 (see chart). Its authors reckon that this exodus will be worth $21 billion a year to developing countries in four years’ time. Europe’s state-funded systems still give patients every reason to stay at home, but even there, private patients may start to travel more as it becomes cheaper and easier to get treated abroad.

Pills and pils

Asian hospital chains stand to be the biggest winners, as their rising stars, such as Singapore’s Parkway Health, look for foreign patients. Thailand’s modern Bumrungrad hospital in Bangkok already sees tens of thousands of Americans a year. It has just opened a new extension, designed to handle 6,000 foreign patients, which it claims makes it the world’s biggest private clinic. The surge of American patients flocking to India’s Wockhardt hospitals has convinced Vishal Bali, the chain’s boss, that medical travel is now “truly reaching an inflection point.”

Not everyone is as gushing. Paul Mango, the chief author of a report by McKinsey, a management consultancy, disputes wild-eyed claims that millions of patients are already travelling abroad. Yet even he predicts that the future for medical travel is bright, and that in the long run it may even “largely dispel the idea that health care is a purely local service.”

Regina Herzlinger, of Harvard Business School, broadly agrees: “The medical travel market is a bit over-hyped today, but economics dictates why it will become huge over time: if a supplier has very high prices and erratic quality, it creates an opening for nimbler rivals.” That supplier is America’s health-care system, a $2.4 trillion colossus in desperate need of reform.

This prospect of an American-led boom in global medical travel raises two questions. Why is it happening now? And what will be the effect on the health-care systems of poor and rich countries?

Impatients

Until recently, few Americans went abroad for medical treatment. Over the past decade, however, that has begun to change. Americans seeking medical care are increasingly making trips far from home, often at their own expense—not just short hops to Caracas for a nip and tuck or dashes across the frontera for cheap Mexican pills. As Mr Steele’s testimonial suggests, they are now travelling across the world for knee and heart surgery, hysterectomies and shoulder angioplasties.

One motive is to save money. America’s health inflation has consistently outpaced economic growth, making it the most expensive health market in the world. The average price at good facilities abroad for a range of common medical procedures is, by Deloitte’s reckoning, barely 15% of the price a patient would have to pay in the United States (see table).

But costs have long been much higher in America than in poor countries, so this alone does not explain the new exodus. Two other factors are now at work. One is that the quality at the best hospitals in Asia and Latin America is now at least as good as it is at many hospitals in rich countries. The second, more worrying, factor is that America’s already imperfect insurance safety net is fraying.

Over 45m Americans are uninsured, and many millions more are severely underinsured. Such people may find it cheaper to fly abroad and pay for an operation out of their own pockets than to find the money for deductibles or “co-payments” charged for the same procedure at home. Arnold Milstein of Mercer, a consultancy, calls them America’s “medical refugees”.

Big business may soon join this wave. Epstein, Becker & Green, an American law firm, says that in the past year big employers have become interested in promoting medical travel among the employees they insure. Many are struggling to cope with soaring health costs and some, they report, are willing to take radical steps to save money.

Hannaford, a grocery chain based in New England, now offers its 27,000 employees the option of getting a number of medical procedures done in Singapore rather than America—at a saving to the employee of $2,500-3,000 in co-payments and deductibles. Blue Ridge Paper Products, a firm in North Carolina that makes milk cartons, also offered employees the option of medical travel, but a backlash from a union has put a stop to the plan. Despite that setback, the general rise in corporate interest is such that in June the American Medical Association, the chief lobbying group for the country’s doctors, issued (surprisingly supportive) guidelines for foreign medical travel.

That has emboldened insurance firms, which had thus far been cautious. A few are beginning to offer voluntary “global medical travel” options on their corporate plans. According to the industry watchers at Epstein Becker, other insurers fear that they may be at a disadvantage if they do not offer such schemes.

Overcoming initial scepticism, Aetna, a giant American insurer, has this year launched a pilot scheme in partnership with Singaporean hospitals. Charles Cutler of Aetna notes that the savings for his firm are not as great as they may be for some others, since it gets volume discounts from American hospitals thanks to its size. Therefore travel abroad for Aetna’s clients makes sense only for procedures costing $20,000 or more, which might include heart surgery. But he remains bullish, observing that quality at the best foreign facilities can be much better than at the average American hospital, thanks to greater transparency and better information technology. He thinks this is inspired by the Asian hospitals’ need to market to a sceptical foreign audience.

David Boucher of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of South Carolina, another big health insurer, at first doubted the quality of care abroad. So he visited Thailand’s Bumrungrad hospital a couple of years ago to see for himself. He recalls sipping coffee at the Starbucks in the hospital’s lobby and thinking that “this is not a straw-village clinic with rusty scalpels!” He has persuaded his firm to let him run a division, called Companion Global Healthcare, to pursue this “blue ocean” opportunity.

Mr Boucher says his division’s customers, mostly manufacturers and other firms with margins that are squeezed by global competition, are keen to experiment with an idea that he reckons could easily replace 5-8% of a company’s health spending with cheaper options; in time, he reckons that share may rise to a fifth. Medical travel may be unfamiliar to individual patients, but he points out that thinking globally is nothing new to his corporate clients: “They may be based in Columbia, South Carolina, but they have competitors and customers in Colombia, South America, as well as in South Africa and in Asia.”

Curtis Schroeder, boss of Bumrungrad, thinks the search for value will push people in his direction: “After all, we’re selling Cadillacs at Chevy prices,” he says. He has good reason to beam: some 33,000 Americans came to his outfit last year alone.

Behind the mask

How will that affect the health systems in rich and developing countries? Listen to critics of medical travel, and you might think that all of this is a tragedy. It has come about, they argue, because of the terrible state of America’s health care, and its consequences for developing nations will be dire. The flow of foreigners will encourage capital and trained staff to flee state-run health-care systems in poor countries in favour of better-paying jobs catering to foreigners and local fat cats.

It is surely right that medical tourism is partly the result of the failings in America’s health system. Moreover, recent research by the World Bank does indeed suggest that “internal brain drain” is a worry in some countries, especially those with few doctors and nurses.

However, in many huge net exporters of doctors and nurses, such as India and the Philippines, an internal brain drain is hardly much of a worry, because there are plenty of medics to go around. And shortages, in countries where they exist, can be alleviated by reforms changing the way nursing education is funded, for instance, that would help to improve their ailing state-run health systems.

A good prognosis

What is more, there are good reasons for thinking that medical tourism will help poor countries. For one thing, private hospitals did not cause the state sector’s neglect of the poorest. Long before medical tourism or private hospitals took off, the state-run hospitals of India and most other developing countries were a shambles. This was chiefly the result of bureaucratic incompetence and corruption, not poverty—as the decent health-care systems in other developing countries like Costa Rica, Malaysia and even Cuba make clear.

Besides, the rising standards at private facilities promise to have important knock-on effects that may benefit even the poor. The World Bank has observed that the rise of high-quality private clinics in Trinidad and other parts of the Caribbean, for example, has encouraged highly educated doctors to return home.

Mr Bali has seen this reverse brain drain at work in his own company. In the past few years, more than two dozen top doctors returned to India from Britain and the United States, he says, because his firm offers them world-class facilities and rewarding work. He rejects the notion that only a handful among the elite benefit from his chain’s excellence, pointing out that Wockhardt’s expansion into second and third-tier cities in India means many ordinary people now have ready access for the first time to such specialisms as cardiac care and orthopaedics.

Standards, as a result, are rising. Several decades ago very few hospitals in poor countries could claim to offer the highest quality of heath care. Today, there are dozens of hospitals around the world that meet the stringent requirements for accreditation by the respected Joint Commission International, a non-profit outfit that assesses the quality and safety of health-care programmes. Indeed, gaining the commission’s seal of approval has become a price of entry into the serious market for global medical travel.

Jonas Bergstrand

Tom Johnsrud of Parkway Health, a big Singaporean hospital chain with operations in Brunei and China, explains that foreigners make up 35-40% of his firm’s patients: “American patients will not make or break any international hospital, but being able to attract them will enhance its reputation.” So although hospitals may raise standards to attract foreigners, local patients will benefit too.

Some international hospitals may even leapfrog over their American counterparts. The best of the bunch are being created from the ground up, without the burden of old buildings and equipment, politicised unions and other baggage that weighs down American hospitals. When Bumrungrad looked for information technology to run its operations a decade ago, it found that vendors were so wrapped up in the arcane and fragmented ways in which rich-country firms do business that they could not manage to design a complete computer system from scratch.

Undaunted, the firm set about the job itself, using best practice from other industries. This was possible, says Mr Schroeder, because his firm’s edge is not only based on cheap labour, though labour costs make up 18% of his total, compared with perhaps 55% at American counterparts. He says, “the bigger difference is the way health care is delivered.”

The firm’s IT proved so much better than that from American or European specialist firms that Microsoft last year took over Bumrungrad’s Global Care Solutions division. Peter Neupert, who heads the American software giant’s efforts in this area, was so impressed that he has decided to put the headquarters of his international health efforts in Bangkok. This leapfrogging is an example, he says, of how “innovation will come from many places as the health-care market goes global and flat very fast.”

Costectomy

As far as America is concerned, there will be limits to the impact of health tourism. Many medical procedures cannot be done abroad safely, concerns about legal liability and malpractice will always linger, and the medical lobby may yet try to blunt this trend. Bumrungrad’s Mr Schroeder argues that his hospital is “not the solution for America’s health-care problem.”

He is right that health care abroad is not a substitute for difficult reforms at home. But medical travel could serve as a catalyst for those reforms. Rajesh Rao of IndUSHealth, a middleman that helps insurers and employers co-ordinate medical care in India, reckons medical travel “is not really about exporting patients, it is importing competition.”

A bit of rivalry from top foreign facilities may introduce transparency and price competition into an inefficient system riddled with oligopolies and perverse incentives. For example, American and European hospitals may cut prices once they realise how much potential business they stand to lose. By Deloitte’s reckoning, medical travel will represent $162 billion in lost spending on health care in America by 2012. There are signs that American health-care administrators are starting to feel the heat. European hospitals may not be immune from such pressure, either. On one estimate, some 50,000 British medical tourists headed overseas in 2006, spending millions of pounds for care in such places as Turkey, India and Hungary.

Aetna’s Charles Cutler confirms that hospital authorities are now “very aware of the competitive threat,” from abroad. The case of Hannaford, the New England grocer, has already prompted local hospitals to reconsider their pricing policies. Christus Health, a health-care provider in the American southwest, has hedged its bets by buying Muguerza, a hospital chain based in northern Mexico, and is now touting its own medical tourism schemes there. And its boss, Thomas Royer, says that his firm is about to expand further, into Peru.

Medical tourism promises to be what Aetna’s Dr Cutler calls “a disruptive market force that improves cost and quality here in America.” Whether or not it turns out to be all its boosters wish for, it will be a force to be reckoned with.




medstar wrote:

August 17, 2008 05:38

healthcare is a human right.
if you can't get it at home,at reasonable cost or time frame,
the being a medical tourist helps eveyone.
the host country,
money,tourism,meeting outsiders,dr/nurse experience

the donor/patient's country,frees up the spot he or she would have taken in the public syatem,uk national health service or canada ontario/quebec care.it enhances care back home by
competition.
we must always avoid monopolization of care public or private.
to avoid denial of care.
canadian ontario public monopoly.
private care entalis 6 months in jail for the dr or nurse.
american private insurance monopoly.
denial for sick and poor.
we need balance which this can provide for the middleclass of the west.
the lower class always were dependent on govt free care
like welfare,a fact of life.

medical liability,
you can sue the pants off the dr in india.

drs in india are arrested immediately with an fir report.
the tourist procedures done are usually minor routine ones.
the nursing care is exceptional.
in india you have a nurse for each arm or leg.
a constant nurse.
too expensive in canada or england.

cadillac care / five or seven star care
is better than run of the mill at home.
and a free holiday.

despite living in the west for 47 yrs i would go
to the emerging world for care.


subrashankar wrote:

August 17, 2008 03:03

In fact it should be possible to develop and establish some neutral ground in a balmy location to provide affordable health care.When these locations offer tax exemptions on earnings of the medical and allied professionals operating it will help bring down costs in developed nations.Jurisdiction is another important matter since insurance costs for the professionals to avert malpractice claims is unbelievable in the US.I know of cases where GP's suffered for years simply because what they prescribed did not suit the patient and very slightly mind you and for a very short period.Even off the shelf medicines can cause such discomfort and people blame their decision and do not sue.Important developments in the medical globalization will be jurisdiction related and suing tendency and attitudes related. To sum up getting treated is getting better treated.


MS2 wrote:

August 16, 2008 23:11

Interesting article. I have no doubt that "medical tourism" will grow in the future. However, I wonder how long these developing country hospitals will be able to maintain their superlative qualities like low cost, clean facilities and good service when Americans and Europeans start to flood their system and bringing with them all the ills of the home country. The article states that insurance companies are getting involved in this medical tourism business. That in itself seems like a death knell... I can see the endless amount of paper work that will be required for reimbursement at a foreign hospital. And our foreign colleagues will soon be introduced to the pleasure of DENIED CLAIMS. Certainly, these hospitals can deal in cash only, but that will severely restrict the number of patients that can receive their care even at lowered prices. Or maybe they can take credit cards, loans etc which seems to be the way Americans pay for anything more than ten dollars. But that can cause liabilities in itself (foreclosure anyone?)

Speaking of liabilities, you know how the law sharks can always smell blood in the water (or operating room). How soon before foreign patients start suing for bad outcomes? Also, medical care is not a vacation, despite the analogy used in this article, it is a continuous process. Your heart surgery might be done abroad, but what about monitoring your health? What about side effects and morbidity? Are you going to start traveling to Thailand everytime you get some chest pains? If not, then how is your medical care going to be integrated? How iare records going to be transfered from Bangkok to Boston? Sounds like their pristine healthcare IT system is going to have to interface with the Balkanized system of America.

Finally, Econ 101 stuff here: demand drives up prices. If 10 million foreigners start to swarm these places, labor, technology and facilities will start to become scarce. How soon before they make it so that the marginal utility of traveling abroad starts to approach dealing with our broken system at home? Also, if this trend continues, Thailand and India can forget about subsidized prices for drugs. I understand that your average Thai person cannot afford 30K for brand name drugs, but Bob from back home sure the hell can and big pharma is not going to give him a free lunch just because he crossed the border.

Now, I'm not saying that medical tourism won't happen, but that as it reaches certain proportions, it will start to meet the same problems that ails our system back home. Then the critical test will come. Can they do it better than we can here in America? Time will tell....


the Halicarnassian wrote:

August 16, 2008 10:58

Despite the irreversible consumption associated with air travel, this trend is a positive for me - with so many prices and artificial price barriers around our world, people need to take an active stance against price discrimination as financial self-defense.

As in so many arenas, the debate over insurance in America has been sorely lacking long-term perspective. American's don't have universal insurance today because of government wage freezes imposed on the Greatest Generation. Do we really think such an arbitrary wartime policy should determine national values today?

I've been going to Bangkok's Bumrungrad for years because of absurd prices and quality at home, but I'm not quite the average American. Unlike many educated professionals, I don't haven't had employer-provided insurance for all those years. I pay for much cheaper global insurance, which avoids much coverage in the United States.

Now that I am back in the United States, I live in one of New York City's medical centers. It's a tough business to understand, but what's clear is that few inside the industry have sufficient reason to give patients lower prices.

FYI ~ Vietnam has excellent dental services and some alternative therapies available at a great discount. And if you work in Japan, their socialized system is very user-friendly for the minor illnesses (but head for continental Asia for the major stuff).


Le Marquis wrote:

August 16, 2008 09:12

To Wilfred Knight:


Why do you choose the NHS as your example for a "socialist" health care? Why are you so selective? The simple truth is, the United States Health system ranks bottom last of all nations in the Western world. Period. Statistics show that the US has the highest infant mortality rate, the lowest life expectancy and per capita expenditure is the highest of all developed nations. Americans have been brainwashed by price-gouging, extorting insurance companies who falsely spread doomsday news about "socialist" health care. Sorry to break the news, but ALL the 25 nations that rank highest in the World Health Organisation ranking of health systems share something in common: they all have a "socialist" system.

Of course waiting lists are a reality of some (not all) of these countries, namely mine (Canada). Last week I injured my arm playing soccer.

I went to an emergency ward to have it checked. I waited 4 hours to see a doctor, have x-rays taken and receive a full assessment of my condition.

4 hours.

It is free! I can live with that.

August 16, 2008 07:31

The hypocrisy of the masses of the rich countries is exposed in this article which itself is full of hypocrisy.

The people from those rich countries are flocking in numbers not seen before.And what is more is that all these people have one or two health insurances back home.

That's where the problem lies.They are creating a lot of problems to the countries they are going.

One is the problem of overcrowding.The foreigners specially the westerns are flooding the beds and fast filling up all the slots.

Also due to increasing demand the prices are skyrocketing.

I don't agree with the article that it will stop the brain drain from the developing countries.That was a crap remark.The problem is of excess brains.

We should discourage the foreigners by charging the same amount that they have to pay at home.This will stop them from coming.

Think that globalisation is good so far as it is good for us and as soon as it starts getting harmful we should kick them out.




August 16, 2008 07:31

The hypocrisy of the masses of the rich countries is exposed in this article which itself is full of hypocrisy.

The people from those rich countries are flocking in numbers not seen before.And what is more is that all these people have one or two health insurances back home.

That's where the problem lies.They are creating a lot of problems to the countries they are going.

One is the problem of overcrowding.The foreigners specially the westerns are flooding the beds and fast filling up all the slots.

Also due to increasing demand the prices are skyrocketing.

I don't agree with the article that it will stop the brain drain from the developing countries.That was a crap remark.The problem is of excess brains.

We should discourage the foreigners by charging the same amount that they have to pay at home.This will stop them from coming.

Think that globalisation is good so far as it is good for us and as soon as it starts getting harmful we should kick them out.




tocq wrote:

August 16, 2008 03:54

Globalizing health is good for all those who seek competent medical care. 20 years ago you could claim that most of the good surgeons were in the West. Not anymore. People flock to Thailand, Taiwan and other Asian countries because they not only perform good surgery but in some ways because they get better after surgery care. No more getting sent home right after heart surgery as happens in the U.S. and then you're supposed to handle any problems from home.


helminoregon wrote:

August 15, 2008 22:57

It works as long as all goes well, but remember even in the best hands and even in the best facilities the unexpected and untoward happens. Do I want to be thousands of miles from home with a complication or near my family, and with my physician who lives in my community, who has kids who go to school with my kids, who has standing with his or her peers.
Its all about whats most important to you as a patient. Just remember that bad thing can happen to good people, in the best of circumstances.


old_boy wrote:

August 15, 2008 21:23

Jim wrote: "For example, the number of doctors produced each year in the USA is around 16,000 -- the same as 1975!"

Jim,

Your analysis is incorrect. In 1970s, the US trained about 10,000 physicians per year. Here's the source:
http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=5111&page=23
At the time, we had just over 200 million people in the US. Now we train 16,000 and have 300 million. What's your point?

The US physician shortage is a myth. US physicians are not distributed evenly, but their number per capita is amount the highest in the world. The reasons for the mis-allocation of physicians are numerous, but at the core is a market failure. Contrary to the assertions of this article (which contained numerous inaccuracies), health care prices in this country are set by the oligopoly of the government (through CMS) and private insurers for the vast majority of patients. Physicians and hospitals are not to blame lose under this system along with the consumer.

 

 

medstar wrote:

 

August 15, 2008 20:30

global healthcare is good.
people need treatment at a reasonable price,
safe,clean,smart staff and respect for patients and families.

globalization in health-care is good for all.
rich and poor benefit from innovation, advances
from both government and non-government care.

it is a level playing field with no more monopoly of mediocre care. competition leads to more care.
demand has and will be met for both rich and poor.,
by an international ethical mission and charity ,
by the institution,the drs and nurses and the community and country of the hospital.
best practices and
guidelines and care-maps only.
errant drs,nurses and institutions are readily inspected and found out by
the users of care.,and governments.
these are global assets.
and good for all.

reputation on a global scale is priceless.
the developed world needs to support the developing world,
south and east.

AnterraCon wrote:
August 15, 2008 18:40

"Americans decry lawyers for driving up health costs, but it is PEOPLE who start the suits, not the lawyers."

Lawyers don't sue people. People sue people.

I'll remember that, when one of those hysterical ads say "injury? Malpractice? accident? - get the money you deserve" comes on T.V.


tp1024 wrote:

August 15, 2008 18:11

Does arrogance even go half the way to a description of the way this article says, that DEVELOPING nations would not suffer quite as much from the outflow of doctors to the US if THEY reform their "decrepit, state run health systems".

This article left me speechless. In over a year this is the worst, most biased article I read by the economist.


statusquocritical wrote:

August 15, 2008 15:53

@ wilfred knight

The fascinating thing I find about those who give the tone of 'blaming' people (americans in this case) for not having insurance are typically at a point in their life where they have suffered and struggled so much through their life that they come to think that everyone else should do/have done the same and be happy to do it. An interesting indicator of the general 'unhappiness' that permeates through america that has, funnily enough, lead to massive pharmacological uptake of anti-depressants, expensive counseling, and in some cases medical 'treatment' - which perhaps(?) is paid by insurance.. who then have had to jack up their premiums because they see an increasing dependence on such anti-anxiety 'services'. A remarkable 'vicious circle' of dysfunction. Let us be spared the 'big picture' idealism of an animal-like ruthlessness that is perceived as ideal in such countries who care so little for their population that they do not even mandate a single week of paid vacation.

It will be interesting to see.. further.. whether Mexico becomes one of those countries that has a burgeoning 'foreign tourist' medical industry -- and how americans will flock there.. hopefully not being medically serviced by the '... children of illegal immigrants who should not be in America in the first place..." which may indeed make an example of a rich american who willingly employed their mother/father in a likely dehumanizing work environment. Because, of course, insurance companies will want to get americans to travel to a country, not a flight away,... just a road trip through.. say.. the Minuteman borderlands. It will be fascinating to see how insurance companies are able to 'involuntarily recommend' services in a foreign nearby country as a condition of covering many of their most 'vital' services. Something may have come home to roost.. i think.

ASH85 wrote:
August 15, 2008 14:14

The globalisation of heathcare is greatly beneficial for almost all parties involved. Not only will this competetion act as the catalyst for reform in the developed countries highlighted, it will allow it to do so in a more effective mannar by reducing the backlog and pressure that the current systems are under. In a world of choice, it is yet another option for patients to choose if they wish to do so and it is up do local health services to create a service equal to or one that proceeds that offered elsewhere. I see the global clinics as a critical partner for local health services through this period of reform and should be commended. Patients deciding to pull out of the NHS waiting lists in favour of foreign treatment will not only benefit the individual concerned via speedy high quality treatment but also the masses that cant afford to fund overseas treatment via reduced waiting times improving local service immediately whilst long term improvements are devised.


statusquocritical wrote:

August 15, 2008 13:55

@ Rabbi Bacon:

I appreciate your patriotic spirit. Do not take 'second-rate' to be completely without merit. It only means 'average' or 'needs improvement'. I have never been unhappy with medical treatment in Canada. However, 'very little desperately wrong' does not mean 'everything all right'.

You may cite international studies of world healthcare systems all you want, but many circumstances within Canada fail the 'reasonableness' test (as many Western healthcare systems around the world do). As someone who works regularly with elderly people, I am constantly exposed to a large number who routinely wait dozens of weeks if not months; from first diagnosis, through referrals, to treatment, for painful and debilitating leg, hip, and foot replacement/rebuilding. Not life or death, as much, as say cardiac or respiratory, but still -- not, in my mind, 'reasonable'.
It is certainly an ongoing conflict within my mind whether increasing private influence is good for the 'long' term of the population.


wilfred knight wrote:

August 15, 2008 10:50

Over 260 million Americans have health insurance & around 40 million are 'uninsured'.
These comprise children of illegal immigrants who should not be in America in the first place, people between jobs , people who chose to forgo insurance& pay their own way, and under 30's who are mainly healthy,& choose to be uninsured.
Law dictates that anybody presenting to a Hospital ED must be treated-regardless of ability to pay-& these costs are shifted to those with insurance. Hence America'a $20 Hospital aspirin.
Over 40 EDs have shut their doors in the LA area in the last decade because of this burden, yet there is no public clamour to repeal this law.
Poor Americans can sign up free of charge for State-run MediCal ,a healthcare welfare programme.Many choose not to bother.
Americans decry lawyers for driving up health costs, but it is PEOPLE who start the suits, not the lawyers. Disease & death are mankind's lot. Denial is paramount. Infallability is demanded.
So American Hospitals are very expensive, in part because they have to hire teams of expensive senior nurses to document every posible spill, fall, incident, survey, committee meeting,operating room conversation, and every wet fart. Forests are demolished to provide the paperwork.Rooms are filled with filing cabinets stacked high with reports for inspectors who arrive unannouced demanding the files.
The third world runs without this costly accountability. Critics ,including "The Economist" ignore these regulatory cost drivers.
Will Americans vote for a less regulated healthcare system ? Highly unlikely. Most are totally unaware of what goes on behind the scenes, as they are immersed in their own woes and just want instant relief, preferably with someone else picking up the tab.
Yes ,a sense of entitlement permeates America, that is not evident in the third world, were some sense of self-reliance is maintained.
Lightweight analyses , such as presented in your editorial, barely scratch the surface.
Your mission is to bemoan American healthcare until it adopts your socialist approach, of which your NHS is such a fine example.


ausdoc wrote:

August 15, 2008 10:31

There are several unintended consequences to the development of medical
tourism: a growing and hopfully helpful pressure to develop world-wide
licenses to practice medicine, followed by international standards for
medical staff credentialling and privileging.
The crippling educational debt of American medical graduates will have
to be curtailed in the face of this competition, to allow lower fees
for rendered services.
All-in-all, this change does nothing to help access to care for the
poor: it just means that cherry-pickers will have more competition

mazim wrote:
August 15, 2008 09:44

A very well written and concise analysis on the subject of medical travel. As the auto industries moving to foreign lands to make up the loss of automobile sales here in the U.S and the west, on the same token the health care providers are gearing to move off shore to provide health care elsewhere in the world other than treating them here. It is the health care system that is dictating these types of phenomenon occurring in this sector. Look, the article cites that over $121 billion will be lost in spending medical upgrading here in the U.S by the year 2012. Where is the health care industry heading to? America is known for high class medical services and is in the process of loosing its feet from competition by those developing countries like Thailand, India, and Philippines etc.

Does the American health care industry really give a hood to this development in the health care sector? This calls for a major reform in the insurance industry areas in order to keep the cost of medical treatment here in the U.S. It is not only the loss of business but as this article so articulately states that many of the U.S trained doctors are in the process of jumping the ship and moving to those destinations. This reverse brain drain will also make American and western medical system to suffer the most.

Overall, reform in the health care system in order to provide better medical care for the masses. Once it can be addressed there will be some real progress in the health care system including the 46 million citizens that are without health care. Or else these people will some how make their way out to have medical care elsewhere. Again, work on the broader spectrum of health care issues rather than sending patients where they do not understand the nature of treatment let alone the culture of that system. This is a wake up call for the entire medical provider in the U.S.


The lexicon wrote:

August 15, 2008 04:14

The western foreign hospitals are horrifically expensive.Not that they treat you differently or specially or you become immortal after being treated in one of those hospitals in that part of the world.


The western foreigners are overcrowding our hospitals.This is really outrageaous!They are responsible for the outbreak of many infectious communicable diseases in Asia.The bring it from their countries.

Their own hospitals refuse to treat them once they discover the kind of diseases they have.


They suffer from poverty back home and enjoy the cheap treatment in Asian countries.


The government in Asian countries must charge these cheaplover patients high pay bills and tax them to death.


Or else locals will face the consequences.

We don't want unhealthy poor patients as our tourists.

Subrabhama wrote:
August 15, 2008 02:13

It is easy to gush about medical tourism and the cost advantages to Americans and Europeans who can't afford to pay for home grown medical outfits. The notriety of US medical system needs no elaboration. Unless a person is insured, he can't think of medical treatment. Insurance is so high cost that many don't go for any cover.

Rising medical institutions in Asia, India in particular, are excited over their facilities becoming afffordable manna from heaven. More and more glass and concrete structures are coming up replete with imported CT Scans and hundreds of other gadgets.

What is forgotten or neglected in all this excitement over medical tourism is the impact it will have very soon on the medical needs of its own citizens. In India especially, nearly 70 percent of the population are living below poverty level. Their medical tratment is provided by government hospitals, etc. This system cracking. Budgetary crisis leads to cutting down on heatlh care and more and more hospitals are without doctors or qualified ones. The better qualified doctors rush to the newly rising 'medical tourism heavens' which pay very high salaries which the government cannot match. Thus we see an imbalance - the more medical tourism develops, the less medical treatment the poor and weaker sections of the population get. It is difficult to arrive at any balance.Thus golbalisation and its progeny medical tourism can come at a very high cost - lack of medical care for millions of its citizens. Who gains from this globalisation?

gwalduck wrote:
August 15, 2008 01:51

Stretching the envelope a bit, I have been a medical tourist for years, as a result of my nomadic lifestyle. I, for one, don't want to go to a British dentist, with long waits, uncomfortable waiting rooms and shoddy facilities: my teeth get done in Ukraine, where the dentists are gentle, effective, and often uncommonly pretty.

Rockefeller (economy class?) might like to consider the fact that even a 30 minute flight takes about 6 hours, door-to-door, so a few extra hours in a plane isn't such a hassle. You are looked after by someone generally at least pretends to care; you are fed and watered... just like being in hospital, really.


Rockefeller J.D. wrote:

August 15, 2008 01:28

Has anyone ever thought of the advantage of having friends and family visit one in hospital after having had intensive surgery? This ought to be quite difficult, 10,000 miles away from home.

Also, how much longer does the patient need to stay in hospital/take time off the job before he/she is fit for a 12h Econ class flight back home?

I think the fun really just starts when there are complications after the surgery and one faces the option of taking to court a Thai doctor. Are compensation payments, if any can be obtained at all, as high as in the U.S.?

One more remark, when the editor talks about "Europeans" using medical tourism, he should better not cite Britons as example, since, by many standards, the British health care system is the worst in Europe.


Rabbi Bacon wrote:

August 14, 2008 22:15

statusquocritical, you called our Canadian system "second rate". i would disagree, notwistanding the WHO only giving us the 30th best system in the world (remember, the US ranked even worse);
"Canada ranked 7th in overall health-system achievement and 10th in terms of health spending, but fell to 30th when these 2 measures were combined because the methodology considers what could be achieved in a country given the level of resources available."

http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/164/1/84-a

The most important statistic tome is the success in maintaining and improving health, i.e. achievement. Every time I have needed the healthcare system, I have been satisfied with the results.


Rabbi Bacon wrote:

August 14, 2008 22:06

Hopefully this type of development will spur change in the crues US healthcare system. I am a dual american-canadian citizen, living in canada who is generally happy with our socialized healthcare. I spent time in Minneapolis canvassing for the late Sen. Wellstone's campaign for healthcare reform. In even one of the more liberal, Canadian friendly states in the union the fear of any change in their insurance system was shocking. both working class and middle class people could not conceive of any other funding arrangement, and the myths they had been told about our system were ridiculous (people routinely dying on gurneys in overcrowded, filthy hospitals, waiting years for an appendectomy, etc). I do not think any one insurance system is perfect, and some blend of public and private money is necessary, but as long as their healthcare policy is dictated by the insurers bottom line, it is not a free market but a failed oligopoly.


salavala wrote:

August 14, 2008 22:00

IT'S ABOUT TIME SOMETHING LIGHTS FIRE UNDER THE GROSSLY WASTEFUL OVER HYPED HEALTH CARE SYSTEM IN U.S. IN THE 20 YRS USING THE CARE HERE, I CAN SAY MOST COMMON CARE IS AT BEST MEDIOCRE AND A LOT OF TRIAL AND ERROR, EXCESSIVE CHARGES. THIS CAN'T COME ANY SOONER AND HOPE WILL SPREAD LIKE WILD FIRE !!


MayoBeans wrote:

August 14, 2008 20:51

Your article did a good job of giving and overview to the influence of globalisation in healthcare as it relates to America. I think your closing commentary on it providing motivation to the radical change America needs to make quality care affordable, ie available, to all.
I do think it important to note that international health care is somewhat limited to scheduled procedures that are both intensive and costly. The hands on physician in pediatric, emergency and daily monitoring of geriatric medicine is insulated from the effect of medical tourism. It is perhaps a real hurdle for the competition to consider. And while the cost of air travel has risen, it is more economically sound to travel abroad for care and recover there.
As the US recoils with a somber economy in the coming years, it is important to note that both presidential candidates have plans to fix the system. With the US hinting at becoming protectionist in the near future, I fear legislation and special interest groups may become less open to letting health consumers spend their money abroad. The US system feeds on itself. Remove a link in the chain and watch the wrinkles appear. It shall be interesting to watch. unfortunately, lives and retirements will be wrecked in the process. Imagine losing your life savings in short order due to being underinsured.


malkovichmusic wrote:

August 14, 2008 19:43

to wilfred knight:
every point you make is true. yet, none of them affect the bottom line, which is the fact that, for whatever reasons, health care is just too expensive for most americans today. americans are dying because they cannot afford the health care they need. your explanations are just that - explanations. this article references a solution. hopefully, a temporary solution, while the american healthcare industry figures out how to provide a system that balances everyone's needs.


nicolasuribe wrote:

August 14, 2008 19:07

The city of Cali, in Colombia's Valle del Cauca (Cauca Valley), has long been the real Silicon Valley, for the number of breast implants performed on both foreign and local patients. Gringo tourists long ago discovered they could get their teeth fixed and bodies refurbished for a fraction of the cost of similar procedures in the US.


wilfred knight wrote:

August 14, 2008 18:13

Why "The Economist's" wide-eyed surprise & gushy comments about medical costs in the third world being cheaper than in America?
Paperwork , regulations, & licensing, smother American Doctors & Hospitals.The third world is relatively free of such burdens. But it piggybacks by copying US surgical innovations.
Labour costs for US Nurses & Personnel can be 10 fold higher than the cheaper,less educated $ poorly trained help in the third world.
Rents, Malpractice insurance,construction & furnishing, gobble up funds in the US, yet your underlying tone is dismissive of these economic factors, which belies "The Economist's" purported editorial stance.
The unwritten suggestion is that somehow the US Doctors charge more , so that the competition from globalization serves them right.
Ignoring the huge difference in standards imposed by US governmental bodies ,in the name of patient safety, undermines the economic arguments of your article.
A facelift or cataract surgery is cheaper in Thailand, but the Doctor there enjoys a far higher standard of living, with servants etc.on his lower reimbursement, than does his US counterpart.
All surgeries have some complications.A patient in the US pays his surgeon (or his insurance does)not just for the surgery, but also for his follow-up care and hand-holding post-operatively.
These are not obtained easily at 36,000 feet on the way home.

 

 

August 14, 2008 15:27

That's some hot iced tea.

M.Choi wrote:

August 14, 2008 15:18

I noticed an increasing number of private patients seeking treatments from Singapore doctors in private practice.

Is this as good for the comparatively affluent foreigners as it could be for the locals?

Are countries attracting medical tourisms importing medical inflations at the same time?


Kewal Khanna wrote:

August 14, 2008 15:16

Thanks to dot com revolution today the world is globalised. It is true medical treatment in USA is most expensive. With more than five million citizens without insurance policies, they have to fend for competitive treatment abroad. It is human nature to have the maximum consumer benefit. As medical patient, an individual would like to save more money as one advances in age. Importantly it is the rising medical treatment in USA and Europe, which is driving thousands of ill patients to seek medical treatment abroad. During an era of globalisation, there can be no sector which can go untouched from its impact. The beneficiary are those individuals who cannot afford sexpensive medical treatment at home but to seek abroad with the double advantagae of being a medical tourist. Surveys and studies on the issue confirm that medical tourism will grow benefitting the develo;ping countries like Philipines, India, Singapore etc. This trend canot be stopped.


statusquocritical wrote:

August 14, 2008 13:57

As a Canadian with a second-rate healthcare system, I welcome the 'overburden' and overflow of persons needing procedures to take their business and cash overseas. Reduced wait times, better patient-doctor ratios, and less overcrowding of emergency rooms with persons suffering ongoing and chronic health problems will likely result in the short term. When the state is footing the bill, overuse and big-ticket services can gladly be paid from wealthy (or desperate or impatient) private purses. I don't fear that a large portion of the medical industry will flee overseas in a dire attempt to chase payroll cash - the lifestyle and circumstances in Canada are too good for persons with families, loyalty, or safety concerns. All others - bon voyage and good luck.

Jim33 wrote:
August 14, 2008 13:33

The passive corruption in the US medical regime will have to finally be reformed due to these competitive forces, or else be resigned to being an emergency room service. The doctor's guild sharply limits the number of specialists in order keep fees artificially high and lawyers continue their predatory attacks on the system.

For example, the number of doctors produced each year in the USA is around 16,000 -- the same as 1975!

With clients soon having greater ability to side step much of the racketeered system, supply and demand will finally have their sway, with falling prices the result. It's an irony indeed that some of the countries that will provide this change have tended to have high levels of corruption(except Singapore).



진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크