Perception of medical practitioners on the importance of medical tourism services
Xiubai Li, Sunghyup Sean Hyun, Hyesun Kim
Abstract
Abstract This study (a) investigates the perception of medical practitioners regarding medical tourism, and (b) examines the differences in the perception of medical practitioners regarding the importance of the services involved. The hypotheses are focused on a series of comparisons of medical institutions that “are or are not involved in medical tourism.” The results showed that (i) professionalism of treatment is recognized as the most important factor regardless of the nature and value of the medical treatment provided while a patient travels; and that (ii) there are no significant differences in surgery, treatment, examination, in‐hospital and patient room costs.
Topics & Concepts
Medical tourismPerceptionTourismValue (mathematics)Medical servicesPsychologyMedical costsMedical treatmentMedicineFamily medicineMedical educationHealth carePolitical scienceNeuroscienceLawComputer scienceMachine learningGlobal Healthcare and Medical TourismCustomer Service Quality and LoyaltyDiverse Aspects of Tourism Research