NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with David G. Vequist, who runs the Center of Medical Tourism Research at the University of the Incarnate Word in San Antonio, about medical tourism in Mexico.
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Kidnapped Americans in Mexico put spotlight on 'medical tourism'The kidnapping of four U.S. citizens who traveled to Mexico last week is putting the spotlight on 'medical tourism,' or when people travel to other countries to receive medical care or buy prescription drugs, often at lower prices.
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Kidnapping of Americans in Mexico puts spotlight on 'medical tourism'In countries such as Mexico, Costa Rica or Thailand, the cost of a facelift or dental implant can be half as much as in the U.S.
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Texas abortion lawsuit puts medical exceptions under spotlightA lawsuit brought by abortion patients in Texas is focusing attention on how some strict state abortion bans could imperil lives by leaving it to providers to prove if a person qualifies for an emergency exception.
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Four US citizens kidnapped in Mexico identified as mother and friends traveling for medical procedureThe four U.S. citizens kidnapped in Mexico last week were revealed to be a South Carolina mother of six and her three friends, according to the woman's mother, and they were traveling south of the border so that the woman could undergo a medical procedure.
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Medical tourism to Mexico is on the rise, but it can come with risks | CNNOne of the four Americans who were kidnapped in Mexico last week was traveling for medical tourism, a friend said. A growing number of US residents are traveling internationally to seek more affordable medical care, more timely care or access to certain treatments or procedures that are unapproved or unavailable in the United States.
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Medical tourism drew kidnapped Americans to Mexico, along with millions of othersIn 2023 alone, the head of the Center for Medical Tourism Research expects U.S. travelers to spend more than $264 million on health care in Mexico.
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