The Intersection of Health Care and Medical Trave

Posted on 6 February 2012 in Uncategorized by admin

The consideration of change in how health care is delivered is a new road with an intersection of need, health care, travel and competition

Your friend mentions that they shop at a new store because the pricing and quality is better. When you get in your car to drive to the store and purchase your groceries you follow the same routine that you follow on a regular basis. The thought of going past your old grocery store to a different store at a lesser cost and higher quality comes to mind, but it is a longer drive and you have never been in that store before.

This same concept applies to health care, hospitals, and physicians, you feel comfortable with your past ways and familiarization. To go outside this normality seems like a lot of unnecessary effort. If you have no other choice because of the cost, lack of access or treatment specialty the concept of medical travel is more appealing.

Health care reform is going to inspire physicians, health systems and hospitals to look at alternative ways of delivering their medical product,” said Nick Christos, Chief Marketing Officer of Elite Underwriting Insurance (one of the largest providers of reinsurance and stop loss to self funded employers, in a interview with the Medical Tourism Association.

http://www.mtmweb.biz/blog/2012/the-intersection-of-health-care-and-medical-travel/

Medical Tourism Resource Online
http://mmedsolution.com/

Medical Tourism Companies Helps To Reduces Health Care Expense

Posted on 18 April 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

As Congress wrangles to craft meaningful health care reform to deliver to President Obama by mid-summer, consensus has emerged on three fronts: reform is no longer an option, the economy is inextricably linked to reducing the cost of health care, and whatever form the overhaul takes will require years, perhaps decades, to implement and fund.

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USA: Obama delivers US healthcare reform

Posted on 7 April 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

President Barack Obama has signed the most sweeping U.S. health policy legislation in five decades into law. Although details are to be finalized, Obama says that local state opposition will not be able to stop it. The Republicans will fight the detail, but have accepted it will be impossible to untangle even if they win future presidential elections.

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Medical tourism banking on U.S. health care reform

Posted on 27 March 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

The medical tourism industry is welcoming President Barack Obama’s new health care reform law with a smile that would make a Botox doctor proud.

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Health care reform alternative: Medical tourism

Posted on 27 March 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

So you’re not thrilled with the new healthcare reform package signed into law today by President Barack Obama. What can you do?

Well, you can be like talk radio host Rush Limbaugh and move to Costa Rica as a way of protesting the new law. Better yet, you can combine your love of travel with your need for medical care by experiencing medical tourism.

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South Korea Promotes Itself As The Spot For Eyelid Surgery

Posted on 20 February 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

With health-care reform stalling out and the recession in full swing, there are more reasons than ever for people to seek cheaper medical treatment overseas.

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The Health Care Reform Deals Are Frauds!

Posted on 3 August 2009 in Uncategorized by admin

The entire premise of the discussions and debate on Capitol Hill misses the key point on the question of changing the health care system. Legislators have debated four points:


a) How to pay for the package


b) How to reduce its cost


c) Whether or not to have a government-run insurance company


d) What mandate to impose on employers to cover their workers


But none of these points copes with the more basic question of where the extra doctors to cover these now uninsured people are going to come from. You cannot cover the 50 million new people Obama seeks to cover without more doctors and nurses. But the administration and even the Blue Dogs in the House have proposed nothing to add to the supply of medical services even as they plan vastly to increase the demand by covering new people.


By focusing on false issues — or at least tangential ones — the politicians can play the Washington game of compromising on these questions while failing to address the central flaw in the legislation.


The projected Senate “compromise” being discussed in the Senate Finance Committee would eliminate the employer mandate and the public insurance option. But it would still extend coverage dramatically without making provision for more medical personnel. The Blue Dog compromise in the House would replace a public option with co-op insurance companies organized by states and would limit the employer mandate, but would have the same blind spot: too few doctors and nurses to cover the new patients.


Both bills would continue to vest the administration with the power to cut Medicare and the mandate to do so. Congress’ only check on the evisceration of the program would be its ability to veto proposed cuts within a limited period of time, as now applies to military-base closure.


Experience has showed that Congress is just as happy to sit back and let the closings or cuts take place without acting to stop them.


And by failing to provide for more doctors or medical schools or nurses, both bills will force widespread rationing of medical care. And that rationing is going to mean lower-quality medical care for us all, especially for the elderly.


A doctor in Massachusetts — where Romney passed a plan similar to Obama’s, recently told us that she now has to read 60 mammograms a day in the time she used to spend on 45. Less time, she said, means less accuracy in reading the complex data and more mistakes. “It keeps me up at night,” she told us, “that I might make a mistake, I am so rushed.”


And, for the elderly, it means less and less medical care. A Federal Health Board will sit in judgment of medical procedures and protocols and will decide what guidelines all providers must use in giving patients certain types of care or withholding them.


For example, the drug Avastin is widely used in the United States to treat advanced colon cancer. But it costs $50,000 a year. So the Canadian health system will not permit its use. As a result, 41 percent of colon cancer patients in Canada die each year as opposed to 32 percent in the United States. The average eight-month wait for colonoscopies in Canada also contributes to the problem. Colon cancer rates are 25 percent higher north of the border than in the United States, where colonoscopies are readily available.

Neither the House nor the Senate will act on these bills until September. Congressmen and senators will be home during August to test public opinion. It is up to us to give them an earful!

source:  http://www.theusdaily.com/articles/viewopiarticle.jsp?id=2443&type=Opinion