Medical tourism refers to people traveling abroad to obtain medical treatment.
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Medical tourism refers to people traveling abroad to obtain medical treatment.
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Health tourism is a wider term for travel that focuses on medical treatments and the use of healthcare services.
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In developed countries such as the United States, medical tourism has large growth prospects and potentially destabilizing implications.
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The growth in medical tourism has the potential to cost US health care providers billions of dollars in lost revenue.
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An authority at the Harvard Business School stated that "medical tourism is promoted much more heavily in the United Kingdom than in the United States".
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Medical tourism providers have developed as intermediaries which unite potential medical tourists with surgeons, provider hospitals and other organizations.
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Circumvention tourism is an area of medical tourism that has grown.
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Circumvention tourism is travel in order to access medical services that are legal in the destination country but illegal in the home country.
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Abortion Medical tourism can be found most commonly in Europe, where travel between countries is relatively simple.
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Medical tourism carries some risks that locally provided medical care either does not carry or carries to a much lesser degree.
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Medical tourism centered on new technologies, such as stem cell treatments, is often criticized on grounds of fraud, blatant lack of scientific rationale and patient safety.
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Field of the medical tourism has recently attracted negative criticism when compared to the alternative notion of sustainable capacities, i e, work done in the context of long-term, locally-run, and foreign-supported infrastructures.
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Medical tourism tourists come to Israel for a variety of surgical procedures and therapies, including bone marrow transplants, heart surgery, and catheterization, oncological and neurological treatments, orthopedic procedures, car accident rehabilitation, and in-vitro fertilization.
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Mountain-based Kangyang Medical tourism is a kind of Kangyang Medical tourism in mountain areas in China.
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Medical tourism tourists treated as private patients by NHS trusts are more profitable than UK private patients, yielding close to a quarter of the revenue from only seven percent of volume of cases.
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