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Kidnapping and treatment risks come with medical tourism


 

What patients are looking for

Medical tourists typically pay 50%-70% of what they would pay in the United States for the same procedure, Mr. Woodman said. Prices are lower because patients pay in cash, foreign wages are lower, and expenses such as malpractice insurance are much lower.

“Many medical tourists don’t have a choice,” Mr. Woodman said. “They cannot afford the U.S. price for the procedure, even if they have health insurance, because they often have a high deductible.” In one study, the majority of medical tourists to Mexico reported an income of $25,000-$50,000 a year.

That same study also found that the average age of medical tourists was just under 65. These older patients often come for a vacation. “A sizable number of medical tourists are looking for surgery plus a vacation, a tummy-tuck and a stay at an all-inclusive resort,” said Steven P. Davison, MD, DDS, a plastic surgeon in Washington, who has written on the phenomenon.

Another large group of medical tourists are immigrants to the United States who want surgery in their country of origin, such as Brazil or Iran, Dr. Davison said, perhaps because they feel more comfortable or have family members who can act as caregivers. He said some go to places that have expertise in a certain procedure.

“For instance, they get their hair transplantation done in Turkey because surgeons there have the expertise and it’s cheaper than in the United States,” Dr. Davison said.

Arranging the trip

Patients often find foreign providers through online brokers who can arrange the flight, hotel, clinic, and physician. Brokers are not unbiased because they are usually paid by the clinic. Mr. Woodman said this arrangement works when the broker can offer a wide variety of options but not when the broker represents just a few clinics.

Mr. Woodman said patients could conceivably make their own arrangements without a broker, and some do so. “All the tools are on the Internet,” he said. “However, many people don’t trust themselves to do this work.”

Even for patients who depend on brokers, Mr. Woodman advises verifying the quality of the clinic and its doctors before signing on. Most countries have online lists of registered doctors, and patients seeking health care can research complaints against a doctor.

There is no insurance that patients can have to guard against the risks of medical tourism, Mr. Woodman said. “When you could get it, it was prohibitively expensive,” he said. “You can get travel insurance, but that just covers peripheral problems, such as flight cancellations, accidental injury, and emergency care. It has nothing to do with problems stemming from planned procedures.

“Some clinics and hospitals serving medical tourists provide warranties on their work,” he added. “However, plastic surgery clinics are less likely to offer warranties, because patients are so frequently dissatisfied.”

How things can go wrong

Mr. Woodman said medical tourists may often receive substandard care when they select a provider who offers unusually large savings, such as 80% off the U.S. price. “Those providers are likely cutting corners to get that kind of savings, and you should stay away from them,” he said.

Even when receiving care at an excellent clinic, patients can get infections if postoperative requirements are not followed, according to Darrick E. Antell, MD, a plastic surgeon in New York, who has treated medical tourists upon their return to the United States.

Typically, patients are told to stay in their rooms for several days after the operation, but friends may push them to go out and have fun, he said. Sometimes patients choose exotic arrangements that place them at risk for infection. As an example, Dr. Antell mentioned a broker who offered a safari in combination with plastic surgery.

Dr. Hermann said tummy tucks are riskier because they involve large incisions, and many such patients are overweight, which impairs healing. “Tummy-tuck patients need a longer recovery, and they often have more discomfort than other plastic surgery,” he said.

When things go wrong, medical tourists have few legal protections. “They usually don’t go to an accredited facility, there is no credentialing of physicians, and their ability to sue is extremely limited,” Dr. Davison said. Patients would have to return to the foreign country and hire a lawyer there, and even then, it is harder to win a case and to receive an award as high as in the United States, he added.

Dealing with follow-ups

An inherent flaw with medical tourism, Dr. Antell said, is that patients typically go back home before postoperative care is fully completed. “They may stay just a few days after surgery, and then fly back home,” he said.

“Patients who have complex operations abroad should stay for 8-10 days to have a proper follow-up,” he said. “But they fly back early, which can also lead to getting pulmonary embolisms on the flight.

“A checkup right after surgery doesn’t uncover many complications, because these tend to occur 7-12 days after surgery,” Dr. Hermann said.

“If they come to me within 3 months after surgery, I charge an upfront fee just to see them, because it takes an hour of my time,” Dr. Davison said. “Then I will take care of acute emergency, such as taking out an infected implant.”

Hermann said many patients wait too long to have their complications treated in the United States. “They may first try calling their doctor in Mexico, who tells them to take some antibiotics or something,” he said. “So when they finally do seek care, the infection is pretty far along.”

What U.S. doctors can do

Patients rarely tell their U.S. doctors that they are planning a trip to a foreign country to undergo medical treatment, even though they have to request a copy of their medical records for the foreign doctor, Mr. Woodman said.

Dr. Hermann said only one of his patients told him she was planning to go aboard for plastic surgery. “She was a young mom, and I tried to talk her out of it,” he said. “I don’t know what happened because she didn’t come back.”

Dr. Hermann said doctors should assume that they won’t be able to change their patients’ minds, and they should try to help their patients make the best of it.

“They should insist on seeing the doctor ahead of time and make sure they get along with them,” he said. “Ask for credentialing of the doctor and the facility, and stay there several weeks post op. But they’re probably not going to do all of this.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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