The Arizona Republic

Attracting medical tourists

‘Medical tourists’ visit Arizona for treatment

- Jorge Valencia KJZZ News Fronteras Desk

Hospitals in Tucson are working to encourage people from other countries to come to Arizona to receive medical treatment, KJZZ reports.

On most weekday mornings, Margarita Artee lies down on a therapy table, facing into a doughnut-shaped pillow and receives treatment for her back problems: ultrasound therapy, electrothe­rapy and a massage. ● And Artee, a 65-year-old English professor, does it in a physical therapy center in her hometown of Ciudad Obregón, a scorching desert town in northern Mexico. But she was instructed to receive physical therapy from her neurosurge­on 400 miles away in Tucson. ● “Why? Because Dr. Hurlbert sent me, from Banner Health, from Tucson, Arizona,” Artee said on a recent morning.

Hospitals and public officials in Tucson and elsewhere in Arizona are working to attract patients like Artee, who was looking for specialize­d treatment outside of her hometown and had internatio­nal health coverage to pay for it. Four local hospitals and Visit Tucson created the Tucson Health Associatio­n to provide concierge services for medical tourists and to take doctors from Northern Mexico to meet counterpar­ts in Tucson, said Felipe Garcia of Visit Tucson.

The hospitals and Visit Tucson invested $250,000 over the past year, Garcia said. And they’re looking at the long term: they’re planning on making the same investment annually, Garcia said.

“What will happen is that then you start getting more and more referrals because people trust you, and we want to build that trust with people in Mexico,” Garcia said.

Tucson’s competitio­n is tough, said Josef Woodman, author of the book Patients Beyond Borders and an industry consultant. The inbound medical tourism sector represents about $9 billion dollars per year across the country, Woodman estimates.

Minnesota’s Mayo Clinic and Ohio’s Cleveland Clinic for decades have been destinatio­ns for wealthy foreigners seeking specialize­d treatment, Woodman said. And lesser known hospital clusters in cities such as San Diego and Las Vegas have recently launched initiative­s to attract medical tourism.

“It’s a start,” Woodman said of the Tucson Health Associatio­n’s first-year investment. “It costs up to a $1 million per culture. So for in other words, if they wanted to go after the Chinese market, it would cost them close to $1 million.”

Artee is just the type of medical tourists want. She was pleased enough with her visit, that she would recommend visiting Tucson for health care to other friends, she said.

She visited Dr. John Hurlbert, a neurosurge­on who specialize­s in spinal neurosurge­ry at Banner University Medical Center, for pain in her back and her left arm. It started with a crash she was in about 30 years ago. Since then, she’s had two episodes in which the pain immobilize­d her, she said.

“It’s the hardest pain I have ever had,” Artee said. “Not even giving birth.”

Two neurosurge­ons in Artee’s hometown of Ciudad Obregón had recommende­d she receive spinal surgery. But Artee’s medical insurance covered care internatio­nally and her broker introduced her to Liz Silva, the point of contact at the Tucson Health Associatio­n. Silva scheduled Artee’s appointmen­ts, helped her transfer her medical records and gave her a hospital tour.

Hurlbert inspired Artee with confidence because of how carefully he examined her and how meticulous­ly explained his diagnosis. He diagnosed her with radiculopa­thy in the sixth cervical vertebra of the spine, meaning an irritation of a nerve leaving her spine. For Artee, that has limited strength in her left elbow and sensation in her thumb and index finger.

After the consult, Artee opted for what Hurlbert calls conservati­ve rather than surgical treatment. She has been receiving physical therapy and practicing yoga in Ciudad Obregón. She is scheduled to see Hurlbert again next year. Hurlbert sought to empower her to maker her decision by giving her as much informatio­n as possible, he said.

“Our job here is not to operate on everyone who comes through the door, but to help them make a decision that works best for them,” Hurlbert said.

For Artee, the experience is so far so good.

“He gave me a confidence the other doctors didn’t,” she said. “He even told me, ‘Thank you for coming and seeing me.’”

 ?? ASHLEY DOWNING/USA TODAY NETWORK, AND GETTY IMAGES ??
ASHLEY DOWNING/USA TODAY NETWORK, AND GETTY IMAGES

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