|
||||
|
||||
Medical Tourism in Malaysia: International Movement of Healthcare Consumers and the Commodification of HealthcareHeng Leng CheeNational University of Singapore - Asia Research Institute January 1, 2007 Asia Research Institute Working Paper No. 83 Abstract: In Southeast Asia, medical tourism has taken off in a big way since the 1997 Asian financial crisis. Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand, in particular, have developed deliberate marketing strategies to attract foreign patients. This paper examines the development of medical tourism in Malaysia, with some references to its neighbouring competitors, Singapore and Thailand. The analysis is framed in the context of an increasing trend in the commodification of healthcare, focusing on marketing, standardization and accreditation, and turning patients into consumers as three features of the process of commodification. The advent of medical tourism in Malaysia marked a significant moment for the domestic healthcare provider industry, allowing it to survive a critical juncture. Subsequent growth of the industry has been characterised by a regional integration of hospital ownership, and an expansion of the medical tourist market. In all of this, the role of the Malaysian state is pivotal in providing a conducive policy environment, and in playing a major role in marketing Malaysian healthcare to the global medical tourist market. The process of transforming Malaysian healthcare into a global commodity is well underway, as the state institutionalises measures for tax support, accreditation, sales promotion, and marketing.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 32 Keywords: Medical tourism, Malaysia, healthcare commodification, healthcare consumers, health tourism, healthcare corporatization working papers seriesDate posted: December 19, 2008Suggested CitationContact Information
|
|
||||||||||||
© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
FAQ
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Copyright
This page was processed by apollo5 in 0.484 seconds