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CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association Journal logoLink to CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association Journal
. 2006 Apr 25;174(9):1247. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.060219

Wait-list weary Canadians seek treatment abroad

Laura Eggertson 1
PMCID: PMC1435972  PMID: 16636318

A Canadian company that arranges cardiac, orthopedic and cosmetic surgery in India, France and other countries says wait lists at home are driving Canadians' demand for its services.

MedSolution.com has fielded 2500 inquiries from Canadians interested in private cardiac and joint replacement surgery since it began operating in late 2005, says John Knox, spokesman for the Burnaby, BC-based company.

So-called “medical tourism” is a well-established industry in Asia and the UK, but companies promoting it in Canada are relatively new. No statistics on the total number of patients are available.

At press time, MedSolution was in the process of sending 6 US patients to its partner hospitals in India and France for surgery, Knox said. About the same number of Canadian patients were undergoing medical assessments to qualify them for the service.

The companies hook patients up with a hospital and surgeon, arrange for their family doctors to send records and consult with the surgeons overseas, make travel arrangements and book hospital admissions.

India has become a destination of choice because treatment is less expensive than in the US and doctors are often Western-trained, says Knox.

Getting a hip replacement, for example, costs about US$40 000 in the US, but US$15 000 in France and US$6000 in India, Knox says. The company also hopes to expand its partner institutions to hospitals in Malaysia and Costa Rica, among other countries.

Although there is no guarantee that Canadians who have the surgeries performed out of country will be reimbursed by provincial health insurance plans, that is not a major obstacle for MedSolution's clients, says Knox.

“Waiting lists are so out of control in this country, many patients are willing to pay anything to obtain swift access to the services they need,” he says. “It's our job to help them find a hospital in a country that suits their personal preferences and their budget.”

In one well-publicized case in Alberta, the province reimbursed Aruna Thurairajan of Calgary for the $3000 she spent having spinal surgery performed in India. The flight cost her an additional $2000.

“I wasn't even wait-listed” in Canada, says Thurairajan. “I had to beg the surgeons [here] to give me an x-ray and an MRI.”

She does not regret her trip and has referred other patients to India, she says. “It's as good as the best hospitals in the US.”

Other medical tourism companies in BC, such as Timely Medical Alternatives, arrange surgeries at hospitals in states bordering Canadian provinces. That Vancouver-based company is compensated by the US hospitals for finding Canadian patients.

The company has chosen not to send patients farther afield because of the risk of complications involved for patients flying more than 5000 miles, says Rick Baker, a principal with the private company. — Laura Eggertson, CMAJ

graphic file with name 7FFUA.jpg

Figure. Medical tourism is increasingly popular in India and other countries, where BC companies are arranging surgeries along with sightseeing for Canadian patients. Photo by: CDC/Chris Zahniser, BSN, RN, MPH

Footnotes

Published at www.cmaj.ca on Mar. 22, 2006.


Articles from CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association Journal are provided here courtesy of Canadian Medical Association

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