Source: Wikimedia Commons and Aakshayprb

By the year 2030 the U.S. will be dealing with a shortage of 120,000 physicians according to a report by the Association of American Medical Colleges. Moreover, people 65 years of age or more will have increased by 50%.

If you think the wait time to see a physician is long now, just wait a dozen years.

The American healthcare industry is so large it is one and a half times larger than India’s entire GDP (gross domestic product). A knee replacement that costs $30,000 in the U.S., can be done for $3,000 in India. This wide disparity, according to Indian writer Rajkamal Rao in The Hindu BusinessLine, is a great opportunity for his country.

He writes, “India’s health services sector can grab a portion of the American market by offering world class medical tourism services to American patients. Even a 5 per cent slice can result in a $175 billion export industry, much larger than our IT services sector today.”

“Americans,” writes Rao, would warmly respond to visiting India to get treated for non-life-threatening ailments—such as knee and hip replacement surgery. …Americans already have a high regard for Indian doctors who have earned a reputation in the U.S. for clinical skills and gracious bedside manners.”

Hospitals, however, may be another matter. They are often perceived by American tourists as being poor or inadequate.

But India has overcome negative perceptions before. In the mid-1990s, most Americans didn’t believe that India had world class internet capabilities or reliable electrical power or Silicon Valley standard workplaces for IT staff and global technology services.

Today, India is a destination center for world class IT services and infrastructure.

“Customer acquisition should start in the U.S.,” Rao writes. The industry should establish primary care clinics in America to refer patients to India, for free. The system should offer a one-stop service—travel, accommodation, cashless direct billing, 24-7 customer service and post-hospital care—all coordinated through a single call centre. Arriving patients should be met at the airport by a full-time adviser who stays with the patient until departure, much like a conducted tour manager.”

“Top quality health care requires abundant labor…and India offers a competitive advantage here. And India has the advantage of being able to recruit English-speaking workers for the entire experience.”

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