Patients Beyond Borders Singapore Edition: Everybody's Guide to Affordable, World-Class Medical Care Abroad
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About this ebook
Josef Woodman
As CEO of Patients Beyond Borders, Josef Woodman has spent the past 15 years researching and vetting international options for quality, affordable medical care. He has met and consulted with ministries and key stakeholders in the world's leading medical travel destinations, touring more than 200 medical facilities in 35 countries. Co-founder of MyDailyHealth (1998) and Ventana Communications (1987), Woodman's pioneering background in publishing, healthcare and technology has allowed him to compile a wealth of information and knowledge about international medical care, telemedicine, wellness, integrative medicine and consumer-directed healthcare. Woodman has lectured at the UCLA School of Public Health, Harvard Medical School, Duke Fuqua School of Business, Scientific American and the International Society for Travel Medicine. He has keynoted and moderated conferences on medical tourism and global healthcare in 20 countries. He has appeared in numerous print and broadcast media, including The Economist, The New York Times, CNN, ABC News, Fox News, Huffington Post, Barron's, The Wall Street Journal, and more. Woodman is an outspoken advocate of affordable, high-quality medical and preventative care for healthcare consumers worldwide.
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Patients Beyond Borders Singapore Edition - Josef Woodman
PREFACE TO THE SINGAPORE SECOND EDITION
THEY SAY THAT the journey of a million miles begins with a single step. About five years ago I took such a step, embarking on a life-changing exploration of what was then termed medical tourism.
I set out to discover what overseas doctors and hospitals offer patients who can’t arrange — or can’t afford — elective surgeries or life-saving medical procedures in the United States, Canada, or Europe. It didn’t take long to discover a relative handful of facilities offering low-cost, high-quality medical care delivered by consummate professionals in clean, comfortable, culturally friendly environments.
I’ve traveled more than a million miles since my journey began, and I return again and again to those countries, hospitals, physicians, and administrators who are shaping today’s ever-expanding global healthcare sector. Many of them are in Singapore, a city and a nation (it’s both) that boasts — according to the World Health Organization — the best healthcare system in Asia and the sixth best in the world (by comparison, the US ranks thirty-sixth.)
The first time I visited Singapore, I had already learned the country served as the hub for healthcare in Asia. Indeed, Singapore is implementing a focused national strategy to become a leading center of medical research and education for the world. These efforts are paying off, and major medical, research, and educational institutions around the globe are stepping up to collaborate. In 2005, for example, officials from Duke University Medical Center and the National University of Singapore signed an agreement to establish a new medical school in Singapore.
Another example is Biopolis, Singapore’s purpose-built biomedical research complex, which opened in 2003. The facility brings together private and public research laboratories and houses the full spectrum of international research and development activities, from basic science to drug development, from genomic research to bioinformatics.
To date I’ve logged five trips to Singapore. Except for the long flight, traveling to Singapore is like traveling within the US. No culture shock awaits me at my destination. Singapore is an immaculate, safe, bustling, modern city where English is the language most often heard. I feel right at home there, and so do the 400,000 medical travelers who seek treatment every year in Singapore’s international medical facilities.
Singapore has been receiving medical travelers for decades now, and the services that have been developed for international patients are unrivaled. Most of Singapore’s international healthcare facilities run International Patient Liaison Centres that arrange everything from transplant surgery to sightseeing tours.
In my homeland of the US and in my profession, it’s hard to escape all the bad news about the sorry state of the US healthcare system, its bloated bureaucracy, deteriorating hospitals, harried physicians and surgeons, rising hospital infection rates, and more. I find none of those problems when my travels take me back to Singapore. On the contrary, I find in Singapore the best of what twenty-first-century healthcare has to offer for human well-being: ultramodern facilities and advanced technical expertise mixed with a caring attitude that makes medical science all the more effective.
Whether patients, physicians, or payers — and regardless of nationality — we are all squarely in the midst of a long-overdue revolution: the globalization of healthcare. Singapore is leading the way, from its bench-to-bedside research efforts to its innovative informational and administrative structures. Those who travel the path I’ve taken will, I believe, choose Singapore as a preferred destination. The leadership is there. The quality is there. The service is there. What more could any medical traveler hope for?
Our editorial team and I are deeply grateful to many in Singapore for their hard work and impassioned spirit in helping to create this book. Special thanks to the vision of Jason Yap, the sleepless nights of Felicia Tan, and the support of all the friendly, hard-working colleagues at SingaporeMedicine.
Josef Woodman
November 2008
Introduction
002If you’re holding this copy of Patients Beyond Borders: Singapore Second Edition in your hands, you probably already know that you need a medical procedure, and perhaps you are considering an affordable, trustworthy alternative to care in your own country. As you can see, this is a specialty volume in the Patients Beyond Borders series, profiling Singapore as a healthcare destination. It is intended for those who already have (more or less) a diagnosis and already know (more or less) what treatment they need. This edition doesn’t provide the breadth of general information about medical travel that you’ll find in our larger book, Patients Beyond Borders: Everybody’s Guide to Affordable, World-Class Medical Travel, now in its Second Edition. Instead, this volume offers a brief overview of the questions you need to answer before you commit to medical travel. Most of its pages are devoted to describing the best places in Singapore to find good treatment and care. It also contains information on health travel agents who can help you make arrangements for obtaining excellent medical care in Singapore at a reasonable price.
In the last two years, I have traveled to a dozen countries and visited more than 100 hospitals, talking to surgeons, healthcare administrators, and their patients. Health travelers are often pleasantly surprised at the quality of care, the prices, and the all-around good experience of their medical travel abroad. As we contemplate our options in an overburdened global healthcare environment, many of us will eventually find ourselves seeking alternatives to costly treatments — either for ourselves or for our loved ones. Healthcare consumers everywhere are in the midst of a global shift in medical services. In a few short years, big government investment, corporate partnerships, and increased media attention have spawned a new industry, medical tourism, bringing with it a host of encouraging new choices.
This new phenomenon of medical tourism — or international health travel — has recently received a good deal of wide-eyed attention. While one newspaper or blog giddily touts the fun ’n sun side of treatment abroad, another issues dire warnings about filthy hospitals, shady treatment practices, and procedures gone bad. As with most things in life, the truth lies somewhere in between. When I speak to interviewers and reporters, I try to emphasize that medical tourism
is a misnomer. Medical travel is not a vacation. Unlike some other books on medical travel, this one focuses more on your health than on your recreational preferences. Business travelers don’t consider themselves tourists; neither should you. This book will help you think about the business
of health travel.
Patients Beyond Borders: Singapore Second Edition isn’t a guide to medical diagnosis and treatment, nor does it provide medical advice on specific treatments or caregiver referrals. Your condition, diagnosis, treatment options, and travel preferences are unique, and only you — in consultation with your physician and loved ones — can determine the best course of action. Should you decide to travel abroad for treatment, we provide a wealth of resources and tools to help you become an informed medical traveler, so you can have the best possible travel experience and treatment your money can buy.
My research, including countless interviews, has convinced me that with diligence, perseverance, and good information, patients considering traveling to Singapore or other countries for treatment indeed have legitimate, safe choices, not to mention an opportunity to save thousands of dollars over the same treatment in their home country. Hundreds of patients who have returned from successful treatment overseas provide overwhelmingly positive feedback. They have persuaded me to write this series of impartial, scrutinizing guides to treatment options abroad.
Why Cross Borders for Medical Care?
Cost savings. Depending upon the country and type of treatment, uninsured and underinsured patients as well as those seeking elective care can save 15-85 percent of the cost of treatment in their home country. For example, a knee surgery that costs $43,000 in the US may cost (depending on the doctors and facilities) US$15,000 in Singapore, including your hospital stay.
Better quality care. Veteran health travelers know that facilities, instrumentation, and customer service in treatment centers abroad often equal or exceed those found in their own country.
Excluded treatments. Many people don’t have health insurance. Even if you do, your policy may exclude a variety of conditions and treatments. You, the policyholder, must pay these expenses out-of-pocket.
Specialty treatments. Some procedures not available in your home country are available abroad. Some procedures that are widely practiced in certain parts of the world have not yet been approved in others, or they have been approved so recently that their availability remains spotty.
Shorter waiting periods. For decades, thousands of Canadian and British subscribers to universal, free
healthcare plans have endured waits as long as two years for established procedures. Patients living in other countries with socialized medicine are beginning to experience longer waits as well. Some patients figure it’s better to pay out-of-pocket to get out of pain or to halt a deteriorating condition than to suffer the anxiety and frustration of waiting for a far-future appointment and other medical uncertainties.
More inpatient-friendly.
Health insurance companies apply significant pressure on hospitals to move patients out of those costly beds as quickly as possible, sometimes before they are ready. As medical travelers to Singapore prepare for their journey back home, care is taken to ensure that they are discharged only at the appropriate time and no sooner. Furthermore, staff-to-patient ratios are usually higher abroad, while hospital-borne infection rates are often lower.
The lure of the new and different. Although traveling abroad for medical care can often be challenging, many patients welcome the chance to blaze a trail, and they find the creature comforts often offered abroad to be a welcome relief from the sterile, impersonal hospital environments so frequently encountered at home.
Safety and Security
The overriding concern of many patients new to global health travel is safety. That’s understandable. Stories of wars, terrorist plots, roadside bombings, subway gassings, mad snipers, and military coups dominate the news. Obviously, we live in a troubled world. Yet, this fact remains: of the more than 3 million patients who traveled overseas for medical treatment in the last five years, we know of no individual who has died as a result of violence or hostility. In truth, most health travelers are usually quite sheltered. They’re chauffeured from the airport to the hospital or hotel, personally driven to consultations, given their meals in their rooms, and chauffeured back to the airport when it’s time to go home. US citizens who are concerned about traveling abroad can check the US Department of State’s travel advisories at http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/tw/tw_1764.html. Similar information services are available in other countries.
How to Use This Book
Before you dive into Part Two, please review the checklists and sidebars in Part One, Reminders for the Savvy, Informed Medical Traveler.
A shortened version of the more complete information in the first Singapore Edition of Patients Beyond Borders, it gives you some of the tools you’ll need to do your research and make an informed decision. You’ll find the following in Part One:
Chapter One: Dos and Don’ts for the Smart Health Traveler
Chapter Two: Patients Beyond Borders Budget Planner
Chapter Three: Checklists for Health Travel
Checklist 1: Should I Consult a Health Travel Planner?
Checklist 2: How Can a Health Travel Planner Help Me?
Checklist 3: What Do I Need to Do Ahead of Time?
Checklist 4: What Should I Pack?