Costa Rica's Health Care System
Statistics from the World Health Organization's "The
World Health Report 1995" place Costa Rica third in
life expectancy in the world, sandwiched neatly behind Japan
and France, and ahead of Great Britain and the United States;
and with a per capita income about one tenth that of the other
four.
Certainly, some reasons for this can be found in the Costa
Rican laidback lifestyle, the healthy, fresh,
non-preservative laden foods of the country, the tropical
climate Costa Rica seems to be a healthy place to live.
But if one looks simply at the life issues, so are many
other places on the globe. Costa Rica is a healthy place
to live because its government continues a long-time commitment
to affordable access to one of the finest
health care systems in the world for each and every
citizen.
- Prescriptions are not needed on most products in
Costa Rica.
- You can take a 90-day supply back to the USA.
- You'll save up to 80% compared to U.S. drugstores.
- In a United Nations study conducted in the 1980s, Costa
Rica's medical system was first in Latin America and
ranked near the United States and Canada among the
20 best in the world. Things are pretty much the same
today.
Costa Rica's lack of a standing army and its historical
commitment to the social and educational welfare of its
citizens have provided the foundation for a "highly
developed medical system, internationally speaking" asserted
plastic surgeon Dr. Arnoldo Fournier.
He continued, "It's
not the surgeons who have provided
this, but the entire history of our country that gives us
this advantage."
Dr. Logino Soto Pacheco, Chief of Surgery
at Hospital Mexico, premier cardiac surgeon in Costa Rica
and one of the foremost in the world, claims that Costa Rica
is unique in its world position in health care.
"I have studied every health care system in the Americas,
and I can assure you that nowhere else can compare to what
Costa Rica offers its citizens,"
he stated emphatically.
Who would doubt these words from the man who assembled the
Costa Rican surgical team which performed the first successful
heart transplant in Latin America.
With a government-sponsored network of 29 hospitals and
more than 250 clinics, throughout the country, the Caja Costarricense
de Seguro Social (CCSS) has primary responsibility for providing
low cost, health services, to the Costa Rican population.
Though presently somewhat overburdened, like most of the Costa
Rican infrastructure, this system has worked well for Costa
Ricans for the past 50 or so years. Open
not just to Ticos, the CCSS provides affordable medical service
to any foreign resident or visitor.
Foreigners living in Costa
Rica, can join the CCSS by paying a small monthly fee based
on their income or they can buy health insurance from the
State monopoly
Instituto de Seguro Nacional (INS), valid with over 200 affiliated
doctors, hospitals, labs and pharmacies in the private sector.
Two well-known private hospitals, Clinica Biblica and Clinica
Catolica, where many CCSS doctors practice in the afternoons
and evenings, offer first-class, ultra-modern
services.
Affiliated with U.S. hospitals, these two private
providers have costs somewhat higher than the public providers,
but still way below anything found in the States.
Most Costa Rican doctors and dentists receive their basic
medical training in Costa Rica. From here, they travel far
and wide, seeking specialized training from the finest teaching
hospitals in the world, often becoming certified in their specialties
in the countries where they receive their advanced training.
It
is not uncommon to find a Costa Rican doctor or dentist speaking
several languages, all learned while pursuing advanced degrees
in foreign countries. Perhaps
it is the CCSS work or the varied travel and study that does
it, but the caring expressed by the doctors and dentists, throughout
the country, is noteworthy in its
extreme.
In 1991, two economists from the University of Costa Rica,
conducted a survey of visitors to this country. Their findings,
documented in the study, indicated that 14.25% of all
visitors came for the express purpose of receiving
medical care of some type.
Over the years, Costa Rica has attracted those in search
of uplifting cosmetic surgery. People from around the world
arrive daily to partake of the healing waters in
over 100 thermal and mineral springs located here.
Dental work,
from fillings to implants, is done routinely on
people from every corner of the world. Many people from
Latin America plan for their medical needs from hip replacement
to heart valve replacement to be taken
care of by the well-trained and skillful physicians, in Costa
Rica, rather than in their native countries.
Clearly then, not only does Costa Rica offer universal health
care coverage to its citizens, but that same high quality
care is available for people from all over the world.
Cosmetic & Reconstructive Surgery
Costa Rica has long been a selected destination
for those in search of the Fountain of Youth. Although
The Fountain of Youth has yet to be discovered, the
talented plastic and cosmetic surgeons of this country,
many schooled and board-certified in the United States
and Europe, continue to provide the appearance of such
to hundreds of satisfied, younger looking people.
Of the "medical tourists" documented in the UCR
study,
previously mentioned, a large percentage came for cosmetic
surgery (dental and cardiovascular procedures were a
close second). Doctor Carlos A. Centeno, well-known
Costa Rican cosmetic surgeon, indicates that the number
of medical tourists increases each year.
Dr. Roberto Murillo, another established surgeon, related
that each of the twenty-five to thirty registered plastic
surgeons in Costa Rica averages seven to eight medical tourists
daily.
The full range of cosmetic and reconstructive surgery is
available here in several modern clinics. With the recent
addition of contemporary laser technology the ability
of Costa Rica's plastic and cosmetic surgeons to
provide world-class services has been enhanced.
Procedures routinely offered by plastic surgeons in Costa
Rica include: total and partial face lifts or reconstruction;
tummy tucks; breast reduction, augmentation and reconstruction;
liposuction; lipo-sculpture; electrolysis for the permanent
depilation of unwanted hair; removal of acne scars and other
skin irregularities; and many other procedures to counteract
aging, or enhance beauty. What nature has wrought, Costa
Rican plastic surgeons are improving.
And they can improve nature's handiwork at a cost more affordable
than in many other countries. For example,
facial cosmetic surgery, (face lift), according to Dr. Centeno,
the most commonly performed procedure here, can cost from $6,000
to $12,000 in the United States.
Comparable surgery in Costa Rica will cost between $3,000
and $4,000 including clinic stay, medicines, nursing care
and the surgery.
Most minor procedures are done on an ambulatory-care
basis, requiring no hospitalization. Major procedures, such
as
some breast surgeries and "tummy tucks," can require
overnight hospitalizations with the cost of the room
included in the "package."
"Prices are sometimes
50% lower than in the United
States," stated a staff person at Clinica de Cirugia
Estetica,
S.A., "but each case is different and prices are quoted
on an individual basis, after consultation with the surgeon."
Even
though each case is different, Dr. Murillo suggests
that many surgeries are 60% to 70% less expensive here
than in the United States.
Non-elective reconstructive surgery, required as a result
of an
accident or illness, leaving a patient disfigured is performed
as well and as skillfully. Should this type of surgery be
necessary, it is advisable that a patient check with his
or her private physician and insurance carrier at home
for coordination and financing.
Dental Care & Surgery
From simple fillings to complicated multiple
implants and periodontal work, Costa Rican dentists
are as qualified and skilled as any to be found. The
orthodontists have their own university programs here
and the periodontists hone their skills at various
teaching universities around the world.
Foreign patients seeking periodontal work and dental implants
arrive in Costa Rica in greater numbers
monthly. There is a group of about 20 dental specialists periodontists,
oral surgeons, root canal specialists,
prosthedontists and orthodontists working together to
provide high quality, specialized dental care, for Ticos
and foreigners alike.
Cost per implant is between $750 and $850. Laboratory work
here is much cheaper, but the materials used are all FDA approved
and imported from the States. |