Monday, December 21, 2009

Medical tourism: '5-star' care at a discount

Canadians often travel south to get away from waiting lists on medical attention. However, Americans often look to go to Canada to escape the unreasonably high expenses that comes with medical attention.

"Former Mill Valley resident John Freeman, 61, now living in Reno, needed a coronary bypass. He had dropped his catastrophic insurance coverage because the $320 monthly premium was eroding his retirement savings and the $5,000 deductible left him with big bills.

Facing a $100,000-plus operation, he thought he had two choices: "submit or die."

A friend pointed him to a third: World Med Assist of Concord, which lined him up with a heart surgeon in Turkey. The all-inclusive cost: $18,000. He had the surgery last spring and "unreservedly" recommends the care."

1 comment:

Lily said...

I can say from personal experience (volunteering at hospitals) that doctors and nurses can be on duty for more than twenty four hours and if they are lucky get three hours of sleep in between. So I am not too shocked that they didn't seem too interested in his case; however, I am happy that guy was able to find an affordable way to solve his problem! Perhaps this says something about America's system? ;p