Razorguns
Well-known member
I'd do yet another debate on Canada's healthcare system - but nah. I'll just let the article speak for itself. I'm too old these days.
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http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/Co...ageid=968332188492&col=968793972154&t=TS_Home
India offers surgery in a hurry
NEW DELHI—When his doctor in Nova Scotia treated his chest pain with cholesterol pills and a wait-and-see attitude, Richard Johnson decided to get a second opinion — and ended up fast-tracked into surgery to open his blocked arteries.
To get it he came halfway around the world, to Escorts Heart Institute & Research Centre in New Delhi, a high-tech private hospital directed by Dr. Naresh Trehan, a New York University-trained Indian cardiac surgeon Johnson found on the Web.
He was treated within hours after landing here last April. Total cost for a 10-day stay, including a side trip to the Taj Mahal in a chauffeur-driven Mercedes: $6,000 (U.S.).
"It sounded like an escort agency, but that aside, the care was great. No more chest pain. They treated me like gold," says Johnson, 55, who runs a motel in Chester, N.S.
"Obviously, this is not for everyone. You can't expect most Canadians to jump on a plane and fly to India for medical care. It would be too stressful," he adds. "When I left Canada, everyone said, `You are out of your mind. You're going to die there all alone in a hovel.'"
But Johnson is on the leading edge of a trend: "medical tourists" from Europe and North America who seem willing to overlook the poverty, teeming streets and decrepit airports of India if it means circumventing long wait times and high costs for health care.
For Canadians, who will have to pay out of pocket even for medically necessary care, speed is the crucial attraction.
Getting care in Canada, Johnson says, is like a visit to the motor vehicles office: "You take a number and wait. We put up with that because we don't know better. The system we have sucks."
Procedures in India cost one-third to one-tenth what they would in the United States — $6,000 (U.S.) for typical cardiac surgery, versus $30,000.
As a bonus, patients may be treated with advanced techniques not routinely available back home. Ninety per cent of open-heart surgeries at the Apollo chain of 33 hospitals, for example, are done without shutting down the heart — easier on the patient but more challenging for the surgeon.
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http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/Co...ageid=968332188492&col=968793972154&t=TS_Home
India offers surgery in a hurry
NEW DELHI—When his doctor in Nova Scotia treated his chest pain with cholesterol pills and a wait-and-see attitude, Richard Johnson decided to get a second opinion — and ended up fast-tracked into surgery to open his blocked arteries.
To get it he came halfway around the world, to Escorts Heart Institute & Research Centre in New Delhi, a high-tech private hospital directed by Dr. Naresh Trehan, a New York University-trained Indian cardiac surgeon Johnson found on the Web.
He was treated within hours after landing here last April. Total cost for a 10-day stay, including a side trip to the Taj Mahal in a chauffeur-driven Mercedes: $6,000 (U.S.).
"It sounded like an escort agency, but that aside, the care was great. No more chest pain. They treated me like gold," says Johnson, 55, who runs a motel in Chester, N.S.
"Obviously, this is not for everyone. You can't expect most Canadians to jump on a plane and fly to India for medical care. It would be too stressful," he adds. "When I left Canada, everyone said, `You are out of your mind. You're going to die there all alone in a hovel.'"
But Johnson is on the leading edge of a trend: "medical tourists" from Europe and North America who seem willing to overlook the poverty, teeming streets and decrepit airports of India if it means circumventing long wait times and high costs for health care.
For Canadians, who will have to pay out of pocket even for medically necessary care, speed is the crucial attraction.
Getting care in Canada, Johnson says, is like a visit to the motor vehicles office: "You take a number and wait. We put up with that because we don't know better. The system we have sucks."
Procedures in India cost one-third to one-tenth what they would in the United States — $6,000 (U.S.) for typical cardiac surgery, versus $30,000.
As a bonus, patients may be treated with advanced techniques not routinely available back home. Ninety per cent of open-heart surgeries at the Apollo chain of 33 hospitals, for example, are done without shutting down the heart — easier on the patient but more challenging for the surgeon.
..