Fri, 7 August 2009 Turbinoplasty tourism means traveling abroad for affordable surgery done in an efficient manner at world class hospitals. It is 1st world care at 3rd world prices. The world is flat when it comes to opportunities for consumers shopping for better and more affordable healthcare. in 2007, approximately 750,000 Americans traveled outbound for medical care. But the trend is global. This podcast is the first hand account of Rajeeve Rameth, a resident of the UK, as he explains having his surgery done in India. Direct download: final_podcast_approved_by_Rameth1.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 1:38 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 30 July 2009 Recorded interview of Dr. Steven Hacker by Traveling4Health recorded at Microsoft Connected Health Conference. Hacker is describing why Microsoft HealthVault and PassportMD, two competitors in the field of personal health record storage, are collaborating. Direct download: Steven_Hacker_final_mp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 5:52 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 18 April 2009 U.S. patients are saving 30 to 70% off the cost of medical procedures in the States by crossing the Canadian border to The False Creek Surgical Centre in Vancouver, B.C For example, the same knee surgery involving an anterior cruciate ligament costing over $10,000 in the States will cost $5,500 in Canadian dollars, according to Centre founder and Clinic Director, Dr. Mark Godley, MB ChB, FRCPC. To learn more about the founder of False Creek Medical Centre read the article in Traveling4Health.com and listen to recorded interview with a US patient as he shares his first-hand medical experience in Canada "A Skiing Accident In Whistler, B.C., 1200 Miles From Home"
Direct download: Godley_main_interview_as_mp3_with_spider_to_patient.wav Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 12:33 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 18 April 2009 U.S. citizens skiing at Whistler in January 2009, faced what we all dread; having a bad accident far from your home in another country. Larry & Shelia Hakim, a Detroit couple in their early 50’s were enjoying a skiing holiday when the worst happened – from the standpoint of ruining a vacation. The fourth day into their vacation on January 27th, Larry had a skiing accident that resulted in an emergency surgery situation. Podcast is their 1st hand medical experience with a private pay hospital in Vancouver, B.C. To read more in depth and review recorded interview w/the founder of the private pay hospital - how US patients can expect to save 30-70% on surgical procedures, review related article "A Better Deal For US Patients In Canada" on www.traveling4health.com. Direct download: Hakim_mp3_final_with_spider_to_doc.wav Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 11:42 AM Comments[0] |
Wed, 31 December 2008 Listen to recorded interview with Healthcare Professional David Printy as he shares how U.S. physicians, medical Read the article. To research more options for living abroad and global healthcare, visit Travelingforhealth.com. Direct download: Healthcare_Freedom_To_Travel_For_Quality_And_Cost_Options_mp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 2:40 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 26 October 2008 "You're going to die within two years or possibly 10 years". That was the best case and worst case prognosis Gary Walton was given by his urologist upon being diagnosed in 2004 with an aggressive prostate cancer. Walton, a resident of Rodeo, California, was 64 years old at the time of his diagnosis. Since then he has rebounded from that dismal prognosis and is retaining the richness of his life with alternative treatments that offer far less negative side effects than any of the treatments recommended by his U.S. doctors. "It was devastating to get that diagnosis," said Walton, "It was presented by the doctor like a death sentence. We asked him what kind of negatives would introduce at that time, and his response was, 'there's a lot of things that can happen, but you just have to understand that this is the only way that you can go.' All the doctor wanted to do was to surgically take out my prostate. It was pretty much a given that after surgery I was going to be incontinent and impotent." "Prostate cancer is devastating to a male because it attacks the male testosterone and the male physiology and consequently that's all devastating mentally as well as the physical problems," said Walton, "Men in their late 70's and 80's may have only slight sexual urges. But when you're in your 50's and 60's and still virile, it's absolutely devastating." The Walton's researched alternative treatments, insisting on referrals to physicians specializing in Brachytherapy seed implantation and radiation. "Because of my Gleason number, I was told I was not a candidate for seed implantation" so I started radiation treatments. At no time did any of the doctors we saw give us any indication that there were other alternative treatments," said Walton. I was prescribed Lupron for about four months and the side effects were just horrendous. "Lupron has tremendously negative side effects for men. The side effects are that you lose bone mass, you lose muscle mass, you lose hair. You get heavy in the hips, your breasts enlarge. Your whole physiology changes from masculine to feminine. It is medical castration. I couldn't even look at myself in the mirror. I couldn't even recognize myself. I was also fainting so I couldn't even trust myself to drive. I lost all kinds of energy. It was just totally devastating. "I joked with my wife, I said, honey "don't throw any dresses away, because you married a man but you're going to end up with a sister." After my 40 radiation treatments my PSA had gone down and it stayed stabilized for about a year, year and a half, but then it started doubling. We were very concerned that the cancer was returning with a vengeance. I woke up one morning after a sleepless night and I told my wife, "you know this is a big wide world. In Europe, in Asia, in South America and in Canada, there must be some research going on that maybe we don't know about here in the U.S., so one of the first places we went to was WHO, The World Health Organization. They suggested HIFU and Dendritic treatments. That's when the Waltons chose to travel outside the U.S. for the treatments they required. "I could have gone to Canada, but because it was February, we chose Mexico." Their research started by contacting HIFU in Charlotte, North Carolina. HIFU has a contract with San Javier Hospital, Puerto Vallarta, for Dr. Morales at The IIB Clinic for Dendritic and for the HIFU procedures. Robert Johnson, VP of Operations for HIFU, arranged everything for us including air and hotel accommodations and no-cost shuttle service daily from hotel to San Javier Hospital. Between my first and second trip to Mexico for Dendritic treatments I had not taken any additional medications or treatments suggested by my doctors in California. I knew that since my PSA had been level for almost a year that it had to be due to the Dendritic treatment. Walton said there are clinical trials of Dendritic treatments going on in the U.S. "I sought the opinion of Dr. Lawrence Fong, University of California San Francisco Medical Center. He is a specialist in the Dendritic area and feels there were worthwhile clinical trials going on showing positive proof that Dendritic treatments would be a good treatment procedure for all kinds of cancer. Walton has made three trips to Puerto Vallarta for treatment. Based on the predictable results, the Waltons anticipate maintaining his PSA level by making annual trips to Puerto Vallarta for the treatment. Each trip takes about week. The treatment procedure at IIB consists of four sessions that Walton describes in detail in a separate recorded interview. "The cost of the HIFU treatment was $25,000.00. The first treatment of both HIFU and Dendritic in February 2007, cost $50,000.00. The last two Dendritic treatments have each been approximately $13,000," said Walton. "At all times we were treated with the upmost respect and professionalism. For a very difficult experience, in a strange country, everyone made us feel comfortable. We had an English speaking interpreter with us at all times during the treatments and available 24/7 for our calls and questions" said Walton. "I truly feel that a doctor who has signed the oath and knows that there are other treatments out there that could be extremely beneficial, and if they don't give you the information and allow you to know that and their patient dies, I think that is the most cruel thing that any doctor can do." said Walton. Direct download: final_version_PC_ATfound_for_virile_Males_mp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 6:16 PM Comments[0] |
Fri, 3 October 2008 For the last three years, 78 year old Walter White, an expatriate living in In July 2008, White underwent stem cell therapy at the IIB Clinic in White related that his father, who suffered from Parkinson's disease' had been in a wheel chair for a couple of years before he passed away, "and I didn't want that to happen to me so I took a chance on stem cell therapy. It was kind of scary," he admits. According to White, the stem cell therapy consisted of taking bone marrow out of his legs for five days and then re-injecting marrow back into his body. "They never used a knife," said White, "They used needles and I had local anesthesia for both operations. I never felt a thing." "They kept me in intensive care for a day and a night just to be on the safe side," said White, "the whole treatment took about two weeks. White said Dr. Raul Morales thoroughly explained everything about the procedure to him and to his wife. "Dr. Morales had a team of four or five doctors, and they checked me out beforehand from head to toe, including my heart," said White. After two weeks of stem cell therapy, White's leg bones were strong enough to walk on his own. "Now I can walk without help and without a cane," said White. The cost was $23,500.00 To research more options for living abroad and global healthcare options, visit Travelingforhealth.
Direct download: Stem_Cell_Therapy_in_Mexico_A_Parkinson_Patient_Walks_Again.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 5:04 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 12 August 2008 Mexico Is Our India for Medical Tourism and A Strong Contender for Baby Boomer Retirement Destinations. Mexican hospitals are equal in quality to the medical tourism hospitals in India, and Mexico has the advantage that it's closer to home which translates into less stress of travel for American medical tourists plus, overall, a more sustainable senior health care resource for baby-boomers considering the cost savings of retiring abroad. Mexico has several hospitals staffed with American and American-trained physicians and surgeons as well as American owned and run hospitals, like the AmeriMed Hospital Group, as well as private medical clinics for urgent care that have sprouted up recently in many of the most popular Mexico coastal towns. So the big picture being painted here is that the same places you might go for surgery or a medical vacation in Mexico are popular retirement destinations for baby-boomers and for the same reasons; the health care experience and the feeling that you're on vacation. Plus, there's an abundance of American communities; neighborhoods where you'll feel at home. New neighborhood, same friends, is Mexico's allure for baby-boomers looking at retiring abroad for the obvious savings in cost of living and for the high standard of living and choice of locations that feature accessible health care in terms of hospitals, urgent care and alternative care. After all, how many times a year do you go to the hospital compared to how many visits you make to the chiropractor, the dentist, and to your physicians for common ailments and to specialists for your individual health care needs? I'm not minimizing how important it is to have a good hospital accessible, but it does mean accessibility to urgent care, family physicians, specialty physicians and alternative care is what's going to sell the homes for the community and resort developers in Mexico looking to incentivize American Baby-Boomers to retire abroad So it's the sustainable medical care in general that allows seniors to maintain a high standard quality of life, and that's what matters most to retirees when picking a retirement destination. More good news for seniors, is that American insurance companies offering expatriate medical insurance for American retirees are now facing stiff competition from private Mexican medical providers offering very affordable urgent care insurance to foreigners in popular Mexican coastal and resort destinations, and soon to offer full-coverage health care insurance for a fraction of the cost of a comparable insurance policy in the States. Competition between the U.S. and Mexico in the health care and medical insurance industries bodes well for baby-boomers looking to sustain their quality of life upon retirement without depleting their financial nest egg for medical care. Check out an example of affordable urgent care insurance available to foreigners living in the popular Mexican resort town of Puerto Penasco (Rocky Point, Mexico), by visiting Mexican urgent care insurance at Travelingforhealth.
Direct download: Mexico_is_our_India_mp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 6:19 PM Comments[0] |
Sat, 26 July 2008 In this interview, Rudy Rupak, co-founder and CEO of PlanetHospital details the vetting process his company goes through to locate the best doctors and put their seal of approval on foreign hospitals listed, by country, at Traveling4Heatlh. "Finding the right doctor is more important than finding the right hospital," said Rupak, "our company is not hospital centric; it's doctor centric. A building doesn't cure a person; a doctor does." "We focus on hospitals that attract the best doctors," explains Rupak. "we've visited every single hospital and met with the doctors personally; interviewing them and doing peer reviews and background checks. I was frankly surprised, when researching for stats comparing the quality of health care by country, that I found no such statistics at the usual respected sources such as the Kaiser Foundation. "There really isn't that kind of data available in published form, but we're going to do it ourselves," said Rupak, "It's a legal challenge. Some of these hospitals have given us data, but it's for internal consumption only and we can only share it with individual patients, but we can't publish it." "The problem is the hospitals are competing against one another, and they don't want their data to be made public especially to the other hospitals," said Rupak, "They're sensitive about that. So although we have the data available, we cannot put a comparison sheet together just because of our convenance with each and every hospital." "We have destination managers located in every single country that we do business in, and one of their main functions is to visit the hospitals and make sure that we get all the data that is germane to the care we're providing. The data collection is set forth by our Chief Medical Officer and Chief Quality Officer who put together the standards for our data collection," he said. View the list of hospitals along with contact information and links on the Healthcare abroad section of Traveling4Health.com. Direct download: Creme_of_the_Crop_mp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 9:27 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 3 July 2008 Global Health Care Where The Patient Wants ItThat's the humanistic and compassionate hue and cry of Frank Carrillo, visionary founder of SIMNSA, a health care insurance provider who pioneered cross-border care between California and Mexico. Looking back on the struggles, 12 years ago, through the U.S. legislative process and combating the attitudes that Mexico had nothing to offer people in terms of quality medical care, Carrillo was true to his vision that U.S. employers insuring legal immigrants would both benefit from the more humane practice of allowing people to receive care in their home country. "They want to be close to their family, sisters; their support system. Given the choice I'm sure they'd like to be in their home country." That was Carrillo's vision and with over 40,000 insured in cross-border insurance plans in California, he's proven the concept. SIMNSA has been successfully marketing cross-border plans directly to U.S. employers and through affiliates Health Net, Aetna, Pacific Care. His networked facilities, numbering 200 providers, hospitals and clinics do a bustling business serving the insured and also walk-in's for private pay at clinics that stay open in the evenings and on weekends. Carrillo and Suggett are preparing and lobbying for the next logical step; a U.S. insurance company taking the lead on extending the same type of humane and compassionate insurance coverage to all U.S. employers employing foreign immigrants of any nationality. "The insurance companies would save money," said Carrillo, "It will be a great marketing tool for the first U.S. insurance company to provide global health care where the patient wants it. They can pick their own country; their own doctor.""I think Aetna will be the ideal company to start this trend, and if Aetna starts it most of the other insurance companies will follow," said Carrillo. It's a great concept from the standpoint that insurance companies will be able to lower their costs, and the insured will get the health care they want. "It's good competition for the U.S. health care system," said Carrillo, "They need global competition. They don't need to compete within themselves, they need global competition, and I think the wakeup call will come from international competition."Visit Traveling4Health to see the location of SIMNSA, to listen to the live interview of Frank Carrillo, and to hear 1st hand accounts of health care abroad. Direct download: Carillo_Great_Concept_fnalmp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 10:30 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 15 April 2008 Don't you often wonder what the American expats who live in Thailand think about the glitzy medical tourism hospitals, like Bumrungrad, and about the quality of the healthcare experienced by the people who live there? Your healthcare experience living in Thailand "is just absolutely convenient and inexpensive," says American expat Cynthia Crowder, "the doctors even work on Sunday." And although Crowder has medical insurance through her husband's U.S. employer, healthcare in Thailand so inexpensive they rarely bother with the paperwork and just pay out of pocket. Crowder says walking into Bumrungrad Hospital is "like walking into a five-star resort. There's Au Bon Pain, Starbucks; it's absolutely gorgeous." And there's no long wait to see a doctor. Usually you can go in the same day you call for an appointment. "If you go to Bumrungrad for a doctor appointment you may have to wait 15-20 minutes, but you won't have to wait much longer than that," said Crowder, "They get you in, they take care of you, you pay your bill, they give you the drugs right there, and you're on your way." "I'm taking my daughter to a specialist today for a sinus infection," said Crowder, "She'll go in and maybe have an X-ray done of her sinuses, and then a scope, and then she'll probably get an antibiotic, and we'll walk out of there for less than $100." Crowder said people who have been in Thailand for a long time often go to Samitivej Hospital instead of Bumrungrad, "just because maybe the prices are a little bit higher and there are so many people who are coming in to Bumrungrad from around the world, said Crowder, "It's kind of a 'tourist' hospital. "The tourists come in and stay at resorts and have all kinds of things done," said Crowder, "You see a lot of Middle Eastern people at Bumrungrad. So in that way it may be a little busy and hectic, but nothing compared to how hectic hospitals are in America." Listen to Crowders lifestyle experiences as an American expat living abroad. Direct download: Healthcare_in_Thailand_mp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 5:21 PM Comments[0] |
Mon, 17 March 2008 Business-savvy expat throws a medical insurance 'life-preserver' to Americans struggling with the high cost of health care in the states. -- More incentive for people to live abroad.
In 2006, Martin Frankel, marketing executive for FedEx, chose to take a severance package and move to Argentina. In researching a solution to his own healthcare needs, he negotiated a fantastic deal for his expat community http://expat-connection.com. It is people like Frankel who are leading the way for global solutions to healthcare abroad and living abroad. Direct download: Insurance_rates_drive_self-employedmp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 12:26 PM Comments[0] |
Sun, 17 February 2008 Seattleite Torrey Russell saved $8,000 by going to Tijuana, Mexico for reconstructive dental surgery. His is one more example of why it pays to shop globally for medical procedures.
Russell, a sales and marketing executive, is no stranger to traveling abroad for medical procedures. He researched his choice of dentist the same way he found the right doctor in India for his hip surgery. He chose Mexico for his dental surgery because "it's so easy and convenient," said Russell.
"I had full teeth replacement along the front six teeth of my mouth and a root canal," said Russell. "I had my teeth straightened out and properly aligned, with real post and beam construction. It's the real thing, not just some big plate. And they don't look like Chiclets, They have the right density and coloration," he said.
"It was less than a couple thousand for the whole thing; both dental procedures, the travel, the accommodations; everything," said Russell, "It would have been 10,000 for the procedures alone here in the U.S." My local dentist, a wonderful man, quoted me $1,800 a tooth which was very expensive for me as a self-employed individual.
Hear the podcast for the details on how Russell did his research and who he chose for his doctor. Go to Traveling4Health.com to find the doctor's contact information and see a map of the dentist office. Just click on "Find Foreign Doctors and Medical Vacation Destinations" and type "Tijuana" in the quick search box.
Direct download: Russell_dental_final_mp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 2:42 PM Comments[0] |
Thu, 14 February 2008 $80,000 for hip surgery alone, in the U.S. or $45,000 for hip surgery abroad and including travel, food & housing for an interesting trip is a good example of why Americans should consider shopping around for medical procedures abroad. Seattleite Torrey Russell, a sales and marketing executive, reports on his experience getting hip surgery in India, and details the steps he took to research and choose the doctor and facility. Direct download: Russell_on_hip_surgery_2nd_podcast_final_mp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 5:00 PM Comments[0] |
Tue, 5 February 2008 Too many people are working extra years just to cover the cost of limited medical benefits � and paying the price with even poorer health. It might pay to shop around locally and globally. And that�s what this episode is about, because shopping globally pays big dividends. For example, I went to Mexico and got four crowns � porcelain crowns � done for $560. I had a lovely vacation; I visited with locals and other traveling Americans and Canadians, for that matter, for the price my friend paid in the States for one bridge! I had a great time, I took care of my teeth, and she stayed at home in the cold. So I came home and cancelled my dental insurance. And I transferred that amount of money that I would ordinarily include in any kind of a Medicare, Medi-gap, or just traditional insurance plan into my vacation fund. Direct download: Dental_in_Los_Algodonas_mp3.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 12:06 AM Comments[0] |
Mon, 4 February 2008 A patient reports on his experience and how he chose the doctor and facility. �The interesting part is that as Americans we tend to believe that the best medical care is only here in the U.S., and the funny thing is when you go to an American hospital today more than likely you'll find either an Asian or somebody from India taking care of you, in large part. So, it�s funny that we don't have that thought that they would at home have the same level of ability in Asia, or whatever, which is simply not true. In fact in Asia I looked at a number of locations both in Thailand and India, and they use a certification which American hospitals cannot even achieve, which is called an ISO rating. ISO is a standard that the Europeans use, and of course they�ve been traveling to India and Asia for many, many years for medical help and so their hospitals are even rated more highly; that would be for infections and for loss of life after the surgery or other complications and so forth . . .� Listen to part two of the live interview and see a list of the process Russell used to determine which doctor and hospital suited his needs best.
Direct download: Russell_Torrey_on_hip_surgery_podcast1.mp3 Category: International Health Care -- posted at: 11:17 PM Comments[0] |

