South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Medical tourism draws patients

Slowed economy, strain on health care system push many to travel

- By Ceylan Yeginsu

On a cold February morning last year, as she lay curled up in a fetal position on her kitchen floor, Melissa Jackson called her manager at a New Jersey beauty salon to ask for some unpaid time off.

It was the sixth consecutiv­e week that the 39-yearold beauty technician was unable to work full time because of the debilitati­ng pain in her pelvis caused by endometrio­sis, a chronic condition triggered by the growth of uterine tissue outside of the uterus.

As her symptoms worsened, she started exploring options to get less costly medical care abroad.

In recent years, while still on her ex-husband’s health insurance policy, she had received hormonal treatments to ease the pain so she could go about her daily life. But since her divorce last year and the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns placed on the beauty industry in March, those treatment costs have become prohibitiv­e, especially with no insurance.

“There is no real cure for endometrio­sis, but if I want to free myself from this pain, then I need to get a hysterecto­my,” Jackson said, her voice shaking as she described the procedure to remove her uterus. “As if the surgery isn’t bad enough, I need to find

20,000 bucks to pay for it, which is just crazy, so I’m going to have to find a way to go to Mexico.”

The coronaviru­s pandemic has pushed millions of Americans into poverty and stripped more than 5.4 million American workers of their health insurance, according to a study by the nonpartisa­n consumer advocacy group, Families USA. Many people like Jackson have experience­d a significan­t deteriorat­ion in their health because they have delayed medical procedures. The fear of large medical bills has outweighed fear of contagion for some, giving rise to an increased number of patients seeking medical treatment in a foreign country.

“We are seeing a pent-up demand for medical tourism during the pandemic, particular­ly in the U.S. where a fast-growing number of Americans are traveling across the land border with Mexico for health purposes,” said David Vequist IV, founder of the Center for Medical Tourism Research, a group based in San Antonio, and a professor at the University of the Incarnate Word in San Antonio.

Even before the pandemic, millions of Americans traveled to other countries for savings of between 40% to 80% on medical treatments, according to the global medical tourism guide Patients Beyond Borders. Mexico and Costa Rica have become the most popular destinatio­ns for dental care, cosmetic surgery and prescripti­on medicines while Thailand, India and South Korea draw in patients for more complex procedures including orthopedic­s, cardiovasc­ular, cancer and fertility treatment.

In 2019, 1.1% of Americans traveling internatio­nally did so for health treatments, according to the National Travel and Tourism Office, although that figure only accounts

for those who traveled by air and does not include the thousands of travelers who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border. Definitive statistics on medical tourism are hard to come by because countries have different recording methods and definition­s of the sector.

Medical tourism has been decimated by coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, but even so, the twin crises of the economy and the enormous strain that COVID-19 has placed on the already faulty American health care system are pushing many patients to travel. Demand for nonessenti­al surgeries has also been building up after more than 177,000 scheduled surgeries were postponed in the United States between March and

June 2020, according to the Center for Medical Tourism Research.

“Our market has always been what I call the ‘working poor’ and they just keep getting poorer,” said Josef Woodman, chief executive of Patients Beyond Borders. “The pandemic has gutted low-income and middleclas­s people around the world, and for many of them the reality is that they have to travel to access affordable health care.”

Before the winter resurgence of the coronaviru­s, Jackson had started to plan and save for a trip to Mexicali, a border city in northern Mexico, where she can get a hysterecto­my for $4,000, one-fifth the cost of the procedure offered in New Jersey. Her best friend

had offered to drive her there and pay for the gas and accommodat­ions.

“We wanted to make a vacation out of it and have some fun before the surgery because it’s such a heavy and dark thing with real consequenc­es,” Jackson said. “At 39, I have to come to terms with the reality that I’ll never have kids. That’s even more painful than my condition.”

For now, Jackson has put the surgery on hold and will wait until the virus is brought under control. Her doctor had pointed to cheaper options for the operation in New Jersey, starting at $11,000 in a local outpatient facility. But Jackson is adamant about having it in the hospital and says the aftercare is more

thorough in Mexico.

“Going for the cheaper option at home means getting lower quality care and taking a risk. That just isn’t the experience for people who do this in specialize­d hospitals in Mexico,” she said. “It’s cheap and safe.” (Many hospitals and clinics in Mexico and other countries have accreditat­ion to ensure their standards are equivalent to medical facilities in the United States.)

In recent weeks, Jackson has had a flare-up of symptoms, which is common when the condition goes untreated.

“I’m not sure if I will be able to wait for COVID to get better,” she said. “This thing cripples every part of my life.”

 ?? GUILLERMO ARIAS/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? The pandemic has devastated medical tourism, but demand remains for treatment in foreign lands. Above, medical advertisin­g in Mexicali, Mexico.
GUILLERMO ARIAS/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS The pandemic has devastated medical tourism, but demand remains for treatment in foreign lands. Above, medical advertisin­g in Mexicali, Mexico.
 ??  ?? A man stands next to a drug store advertisem­ent Jan. 12 in Mexicali, a border city in northern Mexico.
A man stands next to a drug store advertisem­ent Jan. 12 in Mexicali, a border city in northern Mexico.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States