Archive for the ‘Blog’ Category

Medical Travel is for 'everyday folks'

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For many years, Canadians maintained the notion that traveling for medical needs was a perk reserved for the affluent.  And, for many years, that paradigm was basically true.  Canadians were not waiting for health care and we had extraordinary physicians.  We still have extraordinary physicians but the waiting to see them ranges from serious frustration to sometimes death.

The press recently has brought to light the tragic stories of those that have suffered greatly in the absence of accessible health care.   It’s time to step aside from the sensationalism and get real.  Medical travel is now an opportunity for all.  Canadians are delicate when it comes to leaving their Universal system but that doesn’t mean they won’t take action.  It means they have to be guided and educated in a way specialized to their needs.

Our phone does not ring constantly with people clinging to their life.  It is the people like you and I…those of us raising a family, working to pay our bills and save for retirement  that are in need of health care sooner than later.  Whether it be an unexplained rash, a painless lump, or an ongoing dull pain, people now power through because they are dismissed at their doctors (if they have one) or are tired of being bounced around between tests where the left never seems what the right is doing.  It is people like ‘us’ that have no time for these  time consuming games thus choose to  incur the expense rather than endure the frustation.

US and overseas hospitals can often appear as predatory when it comes to their desire to attract Canadian patients.  Some of them are.  More importantly though, many of them are truly opening their arms and resources to serve as a helpful resource for those Canadians that choose to take charge of their own health care choices.  

Medical travel is here to stay and IHP will continue to lead the way.

Medical Travel is for ‘everyday folks’

Posted on:

For many years, Canadians maintained the notion that traveling for medical needs was a perk reserved for the affluent.  And, for many years, that paradigm was basically true.  Canadians were not waiting for health care and we had extraordinary physicians.  We still have extraordinary physicians but the waiting to see them ranges from serious frustration to sometimes death.

The press recently has brought to light the tragic stories of those that have suffered greatly in the absence of accessible health care.   It’s time to step aside from the sensationalism and get real.  Medical travel is now an opportunity for all.  Canadians are delicate when it comes to leaving their Universal system but that doesn’t mean they won’t take action.  It means they have to be guided and educated in a way specialized to their needs.

Our phone does not ring constantly with people clinging to their life.  It is the people like you and I…those of us raising a family, working to pay our bills and save for retirement  that are in need of health care sooner than later.  Whether it be an unexplained rash, a painless lump, or an ongoing dull pain, people now power through because they are dismissed at their doctors (if they have one) or are tired of being bounced around between tests where the left never seems what the right is doing.  It is people like ‘us’ that have no time for these  time consuming games thus choose to  incur the expense rather than endure the frustation.

US and overseas hospitals can often appear as predatory when it comes to their desire to attract Canadian patients.  Some of them are.  More importantly though, many of them are truly opening their arms and resources to serve as a helpful resource for those Canadians that choose to take charge of their own health care choices.  

Medical travel is here to stay and IHP will continue to lead the way.

Ethics, Integrity and Responsibility of a Medical Travel Facilitator

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Kelly Meloche, President, International Health Care Providers Inc.

Having just returned from being the guest speaker representing Canadian patients at the Health Care Globalization Summit in Miami, Florida, I find myself , incredibly inspired and enriched.  This was an invitation only leadership conference where those of us interested in raising the bar of medical travel convened to share ideas, create opportunities and formulate standards.

As the regarded expert in medical travel for Canadians, I have spoken as the industry expert on both sides of the border, helped developed strategies for successful implementation of Internationl Patient Programs as well as created a business model that caters to the Canadian health care consumer, who despite somethimes having their lives in jeopardy, sometimes are more comfortable at working towards becoming “patient patients” rather than manufacturers of their own health care fate.

In 2003, when Canada was in full swing of the Universal Health Care rationale and struggling with wait time challenges, I was operating a wellness centre specializing in sports performance and chronic pain.  My clientele ranged from competitive athletes to grandmothers, all coping with severe pain.  It was here that I first experienced patients’ struggles with present day waiting lists within the Canadian system.   Witnessing patients forced to wait in pain and suffering while seeing this torment ripple through their families, was a tragedy from which I could not turn.

Along with this wonderful opportunity that medical travel offers Canadians, I also deeply caution potential medical travellers to be aware that this is currently an unregulated industry  This means that anyone can designate themselves as a medical travel facilitator and hide behind the smoke and mirrors of fictitious statistics and partnerships.  You need to arm yourself with questions and expectations.  Here  are some suggest questions to ask of your medical traveler facilitator:

  • Who are your provider partners and why have you partnered with them?  What is your process for approving a hospital into your network?
  • How do you get paid?
  • Can I speak to former clients of yours before I make a choice?
  • What is your background prior to entering into the Medical Travel Industry?
  • How many clients have you facilitated in the past?
  •  Can I speak to a representative of one or more of  the hospitals within your network to establish their satisfaction in working with you?

Working with a medical travel facilitator can relieve you of a tremendous amount of stress while expediting your care options at discounted rates.  Trust your instincts when deciding on what agency to work with and by all means, do not compromise quality for cost.  There are very few high quality, reputable agencies out there right now.  If it sounds too good to be true…then it probably is.

Taking your health care into your own hands is a liberating decision.  Yet delicate emotionally.  We are here to help you along the way.

The Value of PET/CT In The Treatment of Breast Cancer

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With October being Breast Care Awareness month in the United States, I thought it was an appropriate time to discuss how PET/CT may make a difference with improving the clinical treatment of breast cancer.
While the use of PET/CT is not currently indicated for diagnosing breast cancer, it can make a difference in the following areas:
• PET/CT accurately stages axillary and mammary lymph node involvement. Axillary lymph node dissection is currently a routine part of breast surgery, since it is the only way doctors who don’t know about PET have of staging breast cancer.
• PET/CT may detect distant metastasis resulting in more accurate treatment.
• PET/CT is also used to evaluate the response to therapy. Treatment can be altered, if necessary, for better results.

• PET/CT is also used when there is suspicion of recurrent disease. Finding recurrent cancer early prolongs lives and increases the chance of beating the disease.
(1) Source: Clinical Positron Imaging Journal, the official Journal of the Academy of Molecular Imaging, Vol 3, Number 5, Sept-Oct 2000.
How does PET work?
PET (Positron Emission Tomography) is a non-invasive diagnostic imaging procedure that identifies abnormal glucose (sugar) metabolism. Since certain cancer cells metabolize glucose more than normal cells, which often occurs before changes in anatomy, PET may identify the presence of disease earlier than other anatomic imaging techniques. As a result, PET may offer important information to aid in more effective treatment.
Along with Breast Cancer, PET/CT is considered particularly effective include lung, head and neck, colorectal, esophageal, lymphoma, melanoma, cervical, brain as well as other less-frequently occurring cancers.

Brian Madison
President, The HCS Group

Dr. Brian Kleinberg educates patients to seek care sooner..not later.

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Dr.  Brian Kleinberg, Chiropractor & Personal Life Coach.

Take a number. That is what the Ontario (and essentially Canadian) health care system has come to. We wait.  We wait hours. We wait days and weeks to get diagnostic test results.  We wait months to get an MRI. We wait months, and even years in some cases, to see a specialist. Many of us may compound these wait times as we have no family MD to direct our care. As a chiropractor I see patients who have waited way too long to get test results and see specialists before they are referred to me. In my chiropractic practice I educate my patients to seek care for their complaints sooner, not later. Yet, people have gotten used to the idea of waiting for health care. This is unacceptable. Seeking health care is not like buying meat in the butcher shop. We take a number to wait our turn to be served for meat. But we can wait – it’s not affecting our well being. Our health is our most prized commodity. We have relegated its importance to that of everyday household foods and products we purchase. But there are serious consequences for waiting for our health care. We suffer needlessly in pain. We may acquire new problems as our body compensates for the area of disease or injury. We defer critical decisions such as rehab or surgery which can lead to disability and in some cases, tragically death. The immediate availability of health care services should be a priority issue for all politicians and stakeholders. For that we shouldn’t wait.