Outsourcing medical care to India and Thailand
Here's what's happening to the country that always describes itself as having the greatest health care in the world:
I doubt many physicians thought their jobs would be outsourced. Maybe they'll think a little differently about "free trade" once they see their own jobs at risk.
This system is broken beyond repair.
NEW DELHI, India - Businesses and insurance companies are starting to eye the potential savings of outsourcing health care from the world's richest country to the developing world.
"It's just one of the many ways in which our world is flattening," said Arnold Milstein, chief physician at New York-based Mercer Health & Benefits, who's researching the feasibility of outsourcing medical care for three Fortune 500 corporations. "Many companies see it as a natural extension of the competition they've faced in other aspects of their business."
With an estimated 45 million uninsured Americans, some 500,000 trekked overseas last year for medical treatment, according to the National Coalition on Health Care. Asian hospitals in Thailand, India and Singapore have long been swarmed by medical tourists looking for tummy tucks and face lifts, but many glitzy, marble-floored facilities are now gaining reputations for big-ticket procedures including heart surgery, knee and back operations.
Some American hospitals already rely on places like India for X-ray readings and other diagnostics, while also importing foreign doctors and nurses. But the U.S. health care industry has been largely immune to overseas competition — just one reason behind soaring costs
I doubt many physicians thought their jobs would be outsourced. Maybe they'll think a little differently about "free trade" once they see their own jobs at risk.
This system is broken beyond repair.
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