Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Is the medical care equal to, or better than the US?

As my business professors would answer...that depends.

What metrics and outcomes are you comparing and how are you comparing them? If you are comparing the World Health Organization's statistics on healthcare monitors we, in the US are doing a terrible job. If you are asking for the ability to go to a cutting edge tertiary care hospital and receive the latest greatest and hopefully best options we have more than you can imagine. They are however very expensive and not cost effective solutions to large scale healthcare issues.

Now mentally go to a community hospital or an inner city hospital faced with significant budget issues and concerns. There are less choices and less cutting edge (read more expensive) options available. Some places must transfer out heart attack patients for cardiac catheterizations. Other hospitals must transfer patients out for brain surgery emergencies and others for trauma patients. So if you had one of these conditions and the facility you wound up at does not treat that condition than you are at an potentially inferior hospital for that specific condition.

Some hospitals only specialize in a specific disease class or age groups. Examples would include cancer specialty hospital, eye institutes, orthopedics facilities and geriatric or pediatric hospitals. So arguably if you are in one of these hospitals and develop a condition outside their scope of practice you may receive inferior care or need to be transferred to receive adequate care.

Now move to a nitty gritty facility with many poor people who are very ill consuming many precious resources. They should have access to their needed medical care. But can the facility or the government spend endlessly to provide the latest, greatest and most expensive care?

Given the scenarios, I think we can agree that in the US there are different levels of care available which create a significant impact on the care received by our citizens.

Now let us move outside the US and examine this question again. Is it possible that there are hospitals outside the US who exist in countries that provide the latest, greatest care for those who can afford it? The clear answer is Yes. Then move to areas similar in capability to the US and the same gradients of care options appear.

As a medical traveler, you want to be helped in identifying the best facilities and the best providers for your condition in these locations. Then you can comfortably say that the care is comparable. On a more granular level you can say that the care is better than or equal to the US. But the question at that point is more a matter of all the amenities that you can afford when you select medical travel. These options are not even considerations when in the US seeking medical care.

Be Well, Travel Safe

Jim McCormick MD
Premiere Medical Travel Company
818.917.6189

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