03901oam 2200565I 450 991082740340332120200520144314.00-429-24485-11-4398-1283-71-4398-1284-510.1201/b11729 (CKB)2670000000593405(EBL)1449151(SSID)ssj0001459431(PQKBManifestationID)12567283(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001459431(PQKBWorkID)11457501(PQKB)11594962(MiAaPQ)EBC1449151(MiAaPQ)EBC4742955(Au-PeEL)EBL1449151(CaPaEBR)ebr11166282(OCoLC)901276392(EXLCZ)99267000000059340520180706d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrMedical tourism facilitator's handbook /Maria K. ToddBoca Raton :CRC Press,2012.1 online resource (175 p.)"A Productivity Press book."1-322-61562-4 1-4665-1389-6 Front Cover; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; A Note to the Reader; Chapter 1: Defining the Role of the Facilitator; Chapter 2: Business Startup; Chapter 3: Developing a Business Startup Budget; Chapter 4: Understanding Managed Care and Health Care Reimbursement; Chapter 5: Building Your Product and Inventory; Chapter 6: The Procedures; Chapter 7: Workflows; Chapter 8: Spa Tourism; Chapter 9: Quality and Safety Transparency; Chapter 10: Putting It All Together: Your Provider Network; Back Cover"Introduction In a nutshell, medical tourism is the practice of traveling outside one's hometown to access medical or dental care, or costly and sophisticated diagnostic testing. For most medical travelers, depending on the destination location and procedure sought, the savings can be from 50% to as great as 90% of the price paid at home. It amazes me when people in the health care and insurance industries look at me dumbfounded when I speak about medical tourism. Some furrow their eyebrows, others shake their heads in bewilderment, and still others dismiss the idea with some offhand comment that if they ignore it, it will not exist. I have a cat that does the last response to many things, but she's a cat. Most of the folks I hang out with are executives in health care or insurance, health law attorneys, academics, or health care professionals. Not cats! So when they dismiss this growing trend, I have to wonder where they will be in the next 5 years. In the United States, there are around 7,500 hospitals with their doors still open. That too, amazes me when I see who is at the helm, and their leadership style, market awareness, and lack of strategic planning. According to a study done by Dr. Paul Keckley of Deloitte in 2008, each one of those US hospitals lost an average of 10 cases from their community to somewhere else on the planet. Worse yet, each hospital lost an average of $21,000 in revenue, (not billed charges) to hospitals elsewhere in the world--hospitals that collected 100% of their fees on those cases, from cash paying customers that went there with US dollars in hand, ready to pay their bill in advance for the high-quality and high-tech health care services rendered. Although the Deloitte Center for Health Care Solutions' volume estimates do not appear to be"--Provided by publisher.Medical tourismHandbooks, manuals, etcMedical tourism362.1BUS042000MED003000MED035000bisacshTodd Maria K.1648636MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910827403403321Medical tourism facilitator's handbook3996922UNINA