Americans Choose Low-Cost Medical Care Abroad

godking
03 December 2007 3:10pm

By traveling abroad for complex medical procedures, Americans can save between five and 20 times the cost of having their operations on home soil.

This staggering figure, published by consultancy firm Social Technologies in a report “Medical Tourism: Cross-Border Care Grows”, demonstrates the rapid rise of medical tourism in the American market.

For reasons of cost, lack of health insurance, or merely to combine treatment with a once-in-a-lifetime vacation, Americans are opting to get their medical treatment abroad.

Be it cosmetic or elective surgery, dental work or even alternative therapies, Americans can make great savings by becoming medical tourists.

“It’s not tough to see why more people are traveling abroad when procedures are five to 20 times less expensive than in the U.S.,” Chris Carbone, who authored the report, said. “Facelifts in Mexico cost about $6,000, compared to $10,000 to $15,000 in the U.S.”

He explained that other procedures highlighted the savings available through medical tourism. An American could save $190,000 by traveling to India for heart valve replacement surgery –that price includes the roundtrip airfare and a trip to the Taj Mahal.

The surgery in India costs roughly $10,000 compared to the $200,000 cost of the same procedure in America, with no trip to the Taj Mahal thrown in.

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