Subscribe to the Newspaper
View the Online Newspaper
Publish your Stuff
Need Help? Click Here
Search: Site   Web
Print Story | E-Mail Story | Font Size
bypass, medical, India, Slaven
LOANED PHOTO
Steve Slaven is seen in his hospital room in New Delhi with one of the nurses who cared for him.

Click to enlarge
What is this?

Save & Share this Article

Foothills resident travel abroad for medical care

Comments 0 | Recommend 0

Steve Slaven had never been to India. But when it came down to his health and a lack of medical insurance, he didn't hesitate to seek medical help there.

The Foothills resident is one more uninsured patient who has used the benefits of medical tourism, the practice of going abroad for medical, dental and cosmetic treatment, with the opportunity to sightsee thrown in.

Through Healthbase, a company that connects patients to leading health care facilities around the world, Slaven got in contact with Escorts Hospital in New Delhi, where he underwent triple bypass surgery performed by then-hospital director Naresh Trehan, a man Slaven calls "India's best cardiologist."

"I just felt really positive about the thing, and maybe the main reason was I had no other option. I could stay here and die, or I could go to India and get fixed," Slaven said.

"By the time I decided to go, I knew that if I didn't do something pretty soon I was going to be in big trouble. So to me it was like a gift from heaven."

The three-week hospital stay, surgery and accommodations for his wife, Jan, cost $14,000, compared to the $130,000 it would have cost to have only the surgery done in the United States, Slaven said.

The primary reason U.S. patients seek medical care elsewhere is the cost, as "46 million people don't have (health) insurance and 120 million people do not have dental insurance," said Saroja Mohanasundaram, chief executive officer of Healthbase Online Inc.

After moving to Yuma, Slaven lost his insurance because it only covered him while he lived in Washington state.

"With diabetes and heart problems, I was unable to get any health insurance," he said.

Although most Healthbase customers are uninsured, the company has served clients who have insurance but whose deductibles for a procedure in the United States exceed the entire cost of a procedure done in another country.

Not only are U.S. patients traveling abroad for care, so are patients from other countries, Mohanasundaram said.

People from around the world resort to medical tourism for various reasons, including gaining access to experienced doctors, technology and medical procedures not available in their own countries.

Healthbase will make arrangements for traveling patients, including booking doctor appointments, securing passports, visas, travel tickets, accommodations, airport pickup and drop-off, and arranging sightseeing, Mohanasundaram said.

It will also help patients find the appropriate hospital for the condition for which they need treatment, he said.

Healthbase is partnered with "only high-quality hospitals" that are internationally accredited and meet international standards, Mohanasundaram said.

Most doctors are trained in the United States or in the United Kingdom, he said. All staff who handle patients speak English, while translators are available for patients speaking other languages, she said.

The staff strives to give the patient personalized service and tries to use routine practices that are familiar for patients, such as serving well-known foods.

"The care over there had a human element to the care that doesn't exist here," Slaven said. "When you come out of recovery, you have your own nurse. They (hold) your hand and ask you how you are doing and look you in the eye."

Slaven is still uninsured and has a few more years to go to qualify for Medicare. Given that, he said, he would "not hesitate in a second" to use medical tourism again if he ever needs it.

"He had turned into an old man and did not look good at all. The improvement is about 150 percent, I would say," his wife said.


See archived 'Life' Stories »
 


Reader Comments
From the editor: Many of you have expressed concerns about some of the harsh anonymous comments from readers. To remedy that, we are introducing new features. You can create your own blog, publish your news and share your photos with the community. Once you fill out a simple form and leave a verifiable e-mail address, you can set up your profile page. It will display all of your contributions and allow you to track issues and easily connect with others.

We want our site to be a place where people discuss and debate ideas that foster stronger communities. We built this for you. Please take care of it. Tolerate broad thinking, but take action against obscene or hateful material. Make it a credible and safe place worth preserving and sharing.


Jobs
Cars
Real Estate
Rentals
Classifieds
Weather
Find it
News Alerts
NWS Yuma - Fair
101°F
Fair and 101°F
Winds From the North at 3 MPH
Last Update: August 20, 2008 - 1:20PM
ADVERTISEMENT 
Event Calendar
Road Work
Gas Prices
Featured Events

 
  • Find an Event
Publish Your Stuff
ADVERTISEMENT 
Poll
Lottery
Horoscopes
Gas Poll
Do you pay cash at the pump to avoid extra charges?
Yes
No
No charge at my station
Don't drive
Enter The Code To Vote
 
powered by
google
Search
        Search: Web    Site