Last year, I blogged about “Medical tourism...lessons from the California gold rush”. It’s taken me a while to write the postscript to this, but I finally got around to it last week when I spoke at the European Medical Travel Conference in Barcelona. (You can download my presentation “Medical Tourism: After the Goldrush” as a pdf file on the IMTJ web site).
In my gold rush analogy, I describe how in 2005/6, medical tourism became the next big thing.
In Google News for 2006, you’ll see headlines appearing like these:
- “One million medical tourists flocking to India”
- “Bumrungrad attracts more than 400,000 foreign patients each year”
- “Philippines is set to cash in on the $3-trillion global medical tourism market”
- “Half a million Britons travel for treatment....”
News stories appeared around the world about a surge in medical tourism. The first prospectors for “medical tourism gold” appeared - medical tourism agents and facilitators, overseas hospitals and clinics were seeking their fortune in the world of medical tourism. The tales of medical tourism gold began to multiply. Estimates of the number of medical tourists were in the hundreds of thousands, the millions, and then the tens of millions. Few medical tourism prospectors questioned the validity of these claims of the discovery of a rich vein of income or whether it was sustainable.......
.........Read the full article at IMTJ: Go to "Medical tourism: After the gold rush"
6 comments:
I just stumbled on this blog in searching about medical tourism and found great information here. I'll follow you on your new blog and wish you good luck. Have a great day! :)
~Shannon
I found your blog while I was looking for the medical tourism opportunities and the limitations in India. I work in USA in Magnet hospital. I found the main limitation of medical tourism for Indian hospital for US citizens are lack of International accreditations like Magnet Recognition in Indian hospitals. Wish you all the best with your blog1
Hi,
This is very interesting post. Health tourism basically includes elective procedures as well as complex specialized surgeries such as joint replacement, cardiac surgery, dental surgery, and cosmetic surgeries. Thanks a lot...
Medical tourism is a chance for people who haven't enough money to have access to healthcare structures abroad. The nowadays financial crisis is empowering the phenomenon to another level though.
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