Friday, July 30, 2010

Paper by Maryam Khan

Author presents various arguments for medical tourism specifically cost savings of up to 90%, where not only individuals but employers and insurance companies are considering providing medical tourism as an option to their employees or insured. She mentions the Blue Shield of California Access Baja Plan that offers people living close to the border option to get treated in Mexico. The article mentions that according to International Federation of Health Plans  almost 11% of US employers are currently offering medical tourism and about 73% of US companies might offer Consumer Driven Health Plans that allows for a medical tourism choice. It states that medical tourists typical take a companion and half get their information off the internet. Again half used a medical travel facilitator and were mostly happy with their experience.

The paper mentions extra options hotels are providing including private entrance, floors with nurse stations, wheelchair accessibility etc.

The paper also indicates that there are many hurdles to medical tourism including coverage by their insurance policies, visas, post surgery complications, language barriers, sanitation, and lack of legal recourse. Issues with the long travel itself are also discussed.


http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1371&context=refereed

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Disruptive Innovation Article by Clayton Christensen

Clayton Christensen's book "The innovator's prescription" talks about solutions to the healthcare crisis.  Its primary premise is that the hospital system of today contains 3 mutually exclusive and competing business models.  In order to create efficiencies, increase quality and reduce costs, it is important for the healthcare system to recognize this, and split the models.  We have already started to see this happen in some cases, with some hospitals focusing on integrated cancer treatment, while offshore clinics providing value-based, fixed cost for routine procedures.  This article is a good summary of the book and talks about matching clinician skills to the difficulty of the medical problem.

http://hbr.org/web/extras/insight-center/health-care/will-disruptive-innovations-cure-health-care

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

World Health Organization Bulletin on movement of patients across borders

This article referes to the need for the uninsured to seek medical tourism from the US, and that insurance companies have started to offer options to seek medical procedures abroad.


http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/89/1/10-076612/en/