My impression is that the care in Mexico is accessible and quite good, with lots of well trained M.D.s It seems you made a good decision to go there for your surgery. I couldn't comment on whether having the surgery was a good decision. That's a personal decision. I suppose you'll know the answer in a few years depending on whether any complications pop up. I hope you remain pleased with the result. Curiously I know someone quite well who is going to Brazil to have exactly the same surgery in April. I am not in favor of it in my friends case, she's not heavy enough in my opinion to justify it, but it is not my decision to make. She is an American Citizen, and has medical coverage, but she can't get approval for the surgery in the U.S. --not heavy enough. She ran into the same problem in Brazil when she last visited, but she did not need to gain quite so much weight to qualify there. Shes been eating like a starving pig since she's been back to get up to the weight she needs to qualify. That doesn't make sense to me, but I'm not in charge of her life.List 1 example of someone from U.S. going to Canada to pay for any kind of serious healthcare, I dont think you can find a single article that would show that.
As for going to Mexico, or Brazil, I can only give you my personal example, a story i havent shared with anyone on this site till this point. I recently had 80% of my stomach removed in Mexico.(gastric sleeve surgery)
I had put on about 50 pounds over the last 5 years being a lazy ass day trader, and i tried dieting and always failed and kept getting heavier, so i was tired of dealing with it.
Anyways when i went to doctors in Canada they said to me that i wasnt heavy enough for the healthcare system to justify me doing the surgery, and that even if I was it would be a three year wait in order to get this surgery. So i did my research, found a world renowned surgeon in Mexico, and got the surgery. I was a little worried at first, cause the picture i had in my mind of going to a mexican hospital was some back alley butcher shop, they had lots of places like that down there where they just pumped people through all day with the surgery, there was a shit load of people who kept coming to the hotel i was staying at to get the surgery, they were literally bringing them in by the busload but the cost at that place was only about 5k, i paid 17k.
What i got for paying more, was a world renowned surgeon,(she is published in various medical articles, and there is numerous magazine articles about her) i got my own room for three days in the hospital along with T.V. and all the amenities, My view outside the window was overlooking a golf course, plus i had nurses coming in at night to give me a massage every night to make me feel better. I actually felt guilty when they were coming in every night but it felt pretty good. The most amazing part is that it was literally pain free, four small holes in my stomach, i was up and walking two hours after the surgery. The only brutal thing was when they pulled a drainage tube out of the side of my stomach three days after the surgery, that was the worst thing ive ever had happen to me, you could literally feel the tube coming through your stomach, and the pain was unbearable but that was about three seconds.
Because it was run like a business, i had a numbers person come in and ask me a bunch of questions about the experience, and ask me how i would rate my pain on a scale of 1-10, i literally told them 0, didnt feel a thing. But the government system in Canada isnt worried about shit like that, because its not a business its the government, its the only option, they couldnt care less how i rated their service.
But the bottom line is this, I never would have gotten that surgery in Canada, i wouldnt have even been allowed to because of rationing. (I wasnt heavy enough) The whole time i was in a private hospital i not only had nurses waiting on me hand and foot, i had actual doctors coming in and checking in on me every couple hours. This is unheard of in the Canadian system.
It does not happen in Canada, I would have ended up in a group room with other people, no privacy, no t.v. no amenities. So i find it hard to fathom that anyone who has witnessed both places, and the level of healthcare you get could possibly come to the conclusion that our healthcare system is better, if you have the money to pay for it.
I personally had a wonderful medical care experience in Petropolis Brazil a few years back. I was treated by an Ear Nose and Throat Specialist. Fast, effective and amazingly inexpensive for me, a tourist with a bad head infection picked up Swimming in Rio. Head the shape of a pumpkin! http://www.hst.org.br/site/instalacoes.php?sessao=Quem%20Somos&modulo=Instala%E7%F5es
Ever since I've been a bit negative on U.S. health care, having experienced care in a system that seemed infinitely better in every way imaginable. But my tale is anecdotal!
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