As Oman positions itself as a medical tourism
destination, the country faces a significant challenge: How to keep its own
citizens from going abroad to seek treatments.
Medical tourism - using foreign
healthcare - is one alternative that patients pursue typically to get cheaper
or more advanced treatments not offered in their home country.
Worldwide, countries like Oman
are working to dip into the medical tourism market expected to reach into the
billions of dollars in the future, according to independent industry analyses.
(Here and here).
Oman investors expect the
demand in American, European and Middle Eastern medical tourists will grow.
Apex Medical Group, a private corporation, announced in November it had
acquired land to build a $1 billion medical city complex in Oman, a country of
three million people.
The complex will include a
530-bed hospital along with several healthcare centers focused on education, prevention
and even a resort.
However, between 2007 and 2009,
Oman residents showed that they prefer medical tourism away from the
motherland, too. As the number of visits increased in the three-year span, the
number of visits per person decreased, according to statistics released by the
government of Oman.
"Many Omani patients go
abroad as outsourced patients," Lamk Al Lamki chief editor of Sultan
Qaboos University Medical Journal told the International Medical Travel Journal
Friday. "They are sent abroad by the government, when the necessary
treatment or the specialist is not available locally. Sometimes locally
available treatment is not trusted by the patients. Unless we have a good idea
of the quality of the care that our patients are receiving abroad, their safety
may be at risk. We need more statistics, better studies and better reporting
systems. The question of who will look after these patients when they return,
has not been answered, but it must be tackled."
Oman, controlled by a monarchy,
began a public relations campaign to try to disuade medical treatments outside
the country.
In the November issue of the
Sultan Qaboos University Medical Journal, published from Oman, researchers
surveyed 40 medical tourists from Al Dakhilya between March 2009 and August
2010 and recommended establishing a national database of medical tourists,
accrediting tourism companies and mandating insurance against potential
complications.
The researchers wrote that
their non-representative sample size was small, with a response rate of 89
percent, partly because of the lack of follow up information on medical
tourists.
Even the thin sliver showed
disturbing results. In a third of those surveyed said that their treatment was
ineffective.
The demand side of medical
tourism remains controversial. Though independent reports in 2008 from analysts
Deloitte and McKinsey concluded that the number of American patients seeking
treatments abroad may be in the millions, an update in 2010 concluded that
number was closer to in the thousands. In 2010, Deloitte concluded that 875,000
Americans were medical tourists. Plus, costs for certain procedures decreased
in the U.S. after exposure to price discrepancies such as a hip replacement in
India costing $8,000 compared with $40,000 in U.S. hospitals, according to
Devon Herrick, analyst for the National Center for Policy Analysis.
"Research into the
delivery of healthcare has not yet adequately evaluated the case of medical
tourism," Lamki wrote Friday. "The issue of lack of data must be taken
very seriously. Medical tourism has some benefits, but there are problems with
it and, as doctors, we have to keep in mind our basic principles. One problem
is poor or no follow-up care. After being in hospital for a short while, the
patient comes home with, perhaps, complications of the surgery or side effects
of the drugs. It is a surgical principle that every surgeon looks after his own
complications and obviously that does not apply for most, if not all, patients
who have been treated abroad. Many countries have very weak malpractice laws
and thus patients have limited ability to complain about poor medical
care."
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