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New kind of Canadian-style care comes to United States

A company that negotiates discounts with American doctors and hospitals to treat Canadians is getting calls from Americans who want those prices, too.

By Pamela Lewis Dolan, AMNews staff. Nov. 5, 2007.


For years, there has been talk about reimporting drugs from Canada to cut pharmaceutical costs. But now, the conversation has turned to reimporting patients from Canada to cut procedure costs.

Richard Baker, a Vancouver native and a public critic of Canada's single-payer health care system, started his business, Timely Medical Alternatives, in 2003 to negotiate rates with American doctors and hospitals so fellow Canadians could avoid long queues. But earlier this year Baker expanded his business to match Americans with U.S. doctors and hospitals, a subsidiary he calls North American Surgery. Baker said uninsured Americans were calling him, looking for the same discounted deals he got for Canadians.


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Technically, U.S. patients don't have to go to Canada and come back, like with reimported drugs -- but the effect is the same.

Baker negotiates rates with U.S. hospitals, similar to the discounted rates insurers negotiate. He adds a percentage onto that rate for his own fee, collects the money from the patients, then pays the hospital cash up front before the patient is treated. In most cases, the negotiated rate is a package deal that includes facility fees as well as payment to all the surgeons and ancillary staff, and the hospital distributes the lump sum appropriately.

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Copyright 2007 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

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