Saturday, August 15, 2009
Health Care in Costa Rica.
Costa Rica has one of the best health systems in Latin America. In addition to National Health care Private Health care is also available, very affordable, and high quality. Many doctors speak English and have received training in Europe, Canada, or the U.S.
There are three large, private hospitals that most expatriates use: CIMA hospital in Escazú, Clinica Biblica in San José, and Clinica Católica in San José-Guadalupe.
Statistics from the World Health Organization place Costa Rica in the top country rankings in the world for long life expectancy even though the per-capita income of Costa Ricans is about one-tenth that of the U.S. and the U.K. Arguably, one reason for this is the slower pace of living in Costa Rica combined with a healthy diet and a great climate. Costa Rica just seems to be a healthy place to live.
Costa Rica's Government-Run Health Care System
With a government-sponsored network of more than 30 hospitals and more than 250 clinics throughout the country, the Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social (CCSS) has primary responsibility for providing low-cost health care services to the Costa Rican population. Although sometimes overburdened, this system has worked well for Costa Ricans for the past 60 or so years.
This medical care is open not just to Costa Rican residents but 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 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.
Costa Rica's Private Health Care System
Many of the country's highly trained physicians and some dentists work in the mornings for the CCSS and operate their own offices and clinics in the afternoons and evenings. While private health care in Costa Rica is more expensive than that offered by the same doctors and surgeons through the CCSS, the price is still far below that of the average office visit in the U.S. For example, a private office visit to almost any medical specialist costs around $40. Continued treatments for diagnosed problems will vary, but will almost always be considerably less than comparable treatment in the United States and Europe. Dental work, too, is provided at a much lower cost than in the U.S. and Europe.
The low costs and quality of care have proompted a boom in “health tourism.”
Cosmetic & Reconstructive Surgery
Costa Rica has long been a destination of choice for those in search of the Fountain of Youth. Many of the plastic and reconstructive surgeons in Costa Rica have been trained and board certified in the USA and Europe and they provide their talented services to thousands of satisfied patients year after year at a fraction of the costs of similar treatments in the USA or Europe.
Dental Care & Surgery
Foreign patients, seeking periodontal work and dental implants arrive in Costa Rica in greater numbers every month. 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.
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