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![]() "bb" wrote in message ... On Fri, 05 Mar 2004 00:44:26 GMT, "NOYB" wrote: According to your link, implants in Costa Rica cost $750-800. In the states, they cost $1200-1800. (We're talking about the implant...not the abutment, and not the crown). That means they're about 50-65%...not 10% as you claimed. Well, like it or not, I think offshore medical and dental care could become a big thing in the future. Maybe, as you say, the quality is hit and miss right now. It would appear there's a large market potential for marketing cheaper medical and dental services by our close neighbors. Certainly one such as yourself, who's relatively early in a career, has a lot to be concerned about. Auto and steel workers may not be the only ones who's life is adversely affected by cheap foreign labor. I doubt it. Comprehensive treatment (ie--the expensive stuff like full mouth rehabilitation and dental implants) can't be completed in a day. It requires dozens of trips to the dentist...in a period sometimes spanning anywhere from 6 months to a year or more. The cost of travel and lodging, and the inconvenience of multiple trips, takes away any comparative advantage the foreign countries might offer. Plus, who are you going to see for emergency care when the 14-unitb roundhouse bridge you just had placed in Costa Rica fractures the weekend before your daughter's wedding? The non-comprehesive stuff (fillings and single crowns) can be completed in a day or week...but who's going to travel to Costa Rica for treatment just to save $500-600 dollars? |
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