Washington
Post
Thursday, October 21, 2004
Surgeries,
Side Trips for 'Medical Tourists'; Affordable Care at India's Private Hospitals Draws
Growing Number of Foreigners
By
John Lancaster
NEW DELHI -- Three
months ago, Howard Staab learned that he suffered from a life-threatening heart
condition and would have to undergo surgery at a cost of up to $200,000 -- an
impossible sum for the 53-year-old carpenter from Durham, N.C., who has no
health insurance.
So he outsourced the
job to India.
Taking his cue from
cost-cutting U.S. businesses, Staab last month flew about 7,500 miles to the
Indian capital, where doctors at the Escorts Heart Institute & Research
Centre -- a sleek aluminum-colored building across the street from a
bicycle-rickshaw stand -- replaced his balky heart valve with one harvested from
a pig. Total bill: about $10,000, including round-trip airfare and a planned
side trip to the Taj Mahal.
"The Indian
doctors, they did such a fine job here, and took care of us so well," said
Staab, a gentle, ponytailed bicycling enthusiast who was accompanied to India by
his partner, Maggi Grace. "I would do it again."
Staab is one of a
growing number of people known as "medical tourists" who are traveling
to India in search of First World health care at Third World prices. Last year,
an estimated 150,000 foreigners visited India for medical procedures, and the
number is increasing at the rate of about 15 percent a year, according to
Zakariah Ahmed, a health care specialist at the Confederation of Indian
Industries.
Eager to cash in on the
trend, posh private hospitals are beginning to offer services tailored for
foreign patients, such as airport pickups, Internet-equipped private rooms and
package deals that combine, for example, tummy-tuck surgery with several nights
in a maharajah's palace. Some hospitals are pushing treatment regimens that
augment standard medicine with yoga and other forms of traditional Indian
healing.
The phenomenon is
another example of how India is profiting from globalization -- the growing
integration of world economies -- just as it has already done in such other
service industries as insurance and banking, which are outsourcing an
ever-widening assortment of office tasks to the country. A recent study by the
McKinsey consulting firm estimated that India's medical tourist industry could
yield as much as $2.2 billion in annual revenue by 2012.
"If we do this
right, we can heal the world," said Prathap C. Reddy, a physician who
founded Apollo Hospitals, a 6,400-bed chain that is headquartered in the coastal
city of Chennai and is one of the biggest private health care providers in Asia.
The trend is still in
its early stages. Most of the foreigners treated in India come from other
developing countries in Asia, Africa or the Middle East, where top-quality
hospitals and health professionals are often hard to find. Patients from the
United States and Europe still are relatively rare -- not only because of the
distance they must travel but also, hospital executives acknowledge, because
India continues to suffer from an image of poverty and poor hygiene that
discourages many patients.
Taken as a whole,
India's health care system is hardly a model, with barely four doctors for every
10,000 people, compared with 27 in the United States, according to the World
Bank. Health care accounts for just 5.1 percent of India's gross domestic
product, against 14 percent in the United States.
On the other hand,
India offers a growing number of private "centers of excellence" where
the quality of care is as good or better than that of big-city hospitals in the
United States or Europe, asserted Naresh Trehan, a self-assured cardiovascular
surgeon who runs Escorts and performed the operation on Staab.
Trehan said, for
example, that the death rate for coronary bypass patients at Escorts is 0.8
percent. By contrast, the 1999 death rate for the same procedure at New
York-Presbyterian Hospital, where former president Bill Clinton recently
underwent bypass surgery, was 2.35 percent, according to a 2002 study by the New
York State Health Department.
Escorts is one of only
a handful of treatment facilities worldwide that specialize in robotic surgery,
which is less invasive than conventional surgery because it relies on tiny,
remote-controlled instruments that are inserted through a small incision.
"Our surgeons are
much better," boasted Trehan, 58, a former assistant professor at New York
University Medical School, who said he earned nearly $2 million a year from his
Manhattan practice before returning to India to found Escorts in 1988.
Although they are
equipped with state-of-the-art technology, hospitals such as Escorts typically
are able to charge far less than their U.S. and European counterparts because
pay scales are much lower and patient volumes higher, according to Trehan and
other doctors. For example, a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan costs $60 at
Escorts, compared with roughly $700 in New York, according to Trehan.
Moreover, he added, a
New York heart surgeon "has to pay $100,000 a year in malpractice
insurance. Here it's $4,000."
In addition to patients
from other developing countries, top Indian hospitals derive a significant share
of foreign business from people of Indian origin who live in developed countries
but maintain close ties to their homeland. But the same hospitals now are
starting to attract non-Indian patients from industrialized countries, and
especially from Britain and Canada, where patients are becoming fed up with long
waits for elective surgery under overstretched government health plans.
"If you can wait
for two years for a bypass surgery, then you don't need it or you're dead -- one
of the two," Trehan said. "Similarly, if you're wobbling on your
frozen joints for two years because of a waiting list, it's a human
tragedy."
One such patient is Tom
Raudaschl, an Austrian who lives in Canada and earns his living as a mountain
guide. Suffering from osteoarthritis in his hip, Raudaschl last year decided to
undergo "hip resurfacing," a relatively new procedure that involves
scraping away damaged bone and replacing it with chrome alloy. He learned he
would have to wait as long as three years if he wanted to have the operation
under Canada's national health plan, a delay that would have cost him his job,
Raudaschl said. In the United States, the procedure would have cost $21,000, he
said.
So this month,
Raudaschl flew from Calgary to Chennai, on India's east coast, where a surgeon
at Apollo Hospital performed the operation Wednesday for $5,000, including all
hospital costs, Raudaschl said by telephone from his hospital bed.
"As soon as you
tell people that you're going to India, they frown," Raudaschl said. But he
said he could not be more pleased with the service. "They picked me up at
the airport, did all the hotel bookings, and the food is great, too," said
Raudaschl, whose private room was equipped with Internet service, a microwave
and a refrigerator. Most important, Raudaschl said the surgeon told him he would
be "skiing again in a month."
To cope with its
backlog of cases, Britain's National Health Service has begun referring patients
for treatment to Spain and France, although for now, the health service limits
referrals to hospitals within three hours' flying time, according to Anupam
Sibal, a British-trained pediatrician and Apollo's director of medical services.
"Nobody even
questions the capability of an Indian doctor, because there isn't a big hospital
in the United States where there isn't an Indian doctor working," he said.
Before they would admit
him for surgery, Staab, the heart patient, said hospital officials at Durham
Regional Hospital asked for a $50,000 deposit and warned that the entire cost of
treatment could run as high as $200,000.
Katie Galbraith, a
hospital spokeswoman, confirmed in an e-mail that hospital costs in such cases
typically are in the neighborhood of $100,000; the surgeon's bill, which is
charged separately, would have added tens of thousands more. Patients such as
Staab who do not qualify for charity care often are offered a payment plan, she
said.
Staab was discharged
from the Indian hospital Monday and was recuperating at a nearby hotel. He
planned to return to Durham after visiting the Taj Mahal.