Medical tourism is a rapidly growing industry, estimated to bring in gross revenues now well in excess of $60 billion per year, and Mexico is a convenient destination for many Americans in need of pharmaceutical drugs, dental work, and surgical procedures. Prices may be as much as two-thirds below those in the United States for comparable goods and services. The Los Angeles Times reports, for example, that at Los Algodones, a Mexican town of about 10,000 population on the border with California, ?dental offices outnumber restaurants 49 to nine. Add in the 26 pharmacies, 20 optical shops and 14 physicians offices, and you?ve got something of a mecca of medicine.? Similar towns may be found here and there along the entire Mexican border, especially across from Texas.
http://www.independent.org/blog/?p=588
Bumrungrad hospital Thailand
Steven Cherkas expresses similar views. When he had a heart attack while visiting Thailand in 2005, his impulse was to rush home to Columbus, Ohio, for treatment. Advised that air travel could prove dangerous, the 64-year-old businessman underwent double bypass surgery at Bumrungrad.
"I was treated like a respected guest as well as a patient in need of good medical care," he says. "Press the button, and they respond." His surgery cost less than $17,000, and his insurance covered all but $3,000 of it. Stateside, he estimates, he'd have paid up to $20,000 out of pocket.
"They have state-of-the-art everything," says Cherkas, who says he avoids U.S. medical care now and returned to Bumrungrad in 2006 for cellulitis treatment.
HALF A MILLION CLIENTS
Cherkas is among an estimated 500,000 Americans treated abroad in 2006. As U.S. health care and insurance costs soar, more people are opting for medical and dental care in unfamiliar surroundings and thousands of miles from their families and doctors. "Medical tourism" has morphed in recent years from an obscure phenomenon into a global industry, fueled by the Internet, ease of travel, shorter wait times for appointments and greater international sharing of medical "best practices," says Karen H. Timmons, CEO of the Joint Commission International (JCI), the overseas arm of the nonprofit Joint Commission, which accredits U.S. health facilities.
http://bulletin.aarp.org/yourhealth/articles/traveling_for_treatment.html
Comparable drugs, dentistry and medical services in Mexico? You must be crazy. I live about 100 miles from the border and know a few people who have tried it. Many of the drugs are fakes. You don't really think an American trained pharmacist is dispensing those drugs do you? And the doctors and dentists are those (if you are lucky) that went to medical or dental school in Mexico and can't pass the boards in the U.S. I mean, doesn't it make sense that if you could practice in the U.S. instead of Mexico you would? There is one reason and one reason only - it's cheaper and you don't need prescriptions. If it is something like vicodin it may be harder to get but the pharmacy sends you to one of their "doctors" for a prescription so they can get another $50 or so from you. Had a friend who wanted vicodin and had to go through this every time.
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