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Sandy's avatar

Having lived in Europe for 25 years, I can attest to the fact of them having great medical care, and dental, as well. We went to Croatia for dental work. I had surgery in Sicily and Italy, while several friends had elective surgical procedures done in Budapest. Even being non-Europeans, the cost was always a fraction of what it would have been in the USA.

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William Barnes's avatar

Dear Brandon and Michael:

When I lived in El Paso, TX, it was amazing how 2-laned the medical travel was. One lane was for all the people traveling from Mexico to the US for medical care. The other, much lesser-known, but equally as well-traveled, was the people traveling from the US to Mexico for health care. When I talked to people who frequently traveled the second lane, I was told the reason for their travels were the quality of care and the cost. They all said the quality of care in the Mexican hospitals, clinics, and doctors' office was equal and sometimes better than the health care in the US. The second reason, of course, was the cost. Whatever the cost of a procedure in the US, it was usually half of that in Mexico. Ciudad Juarez was a popular destination for people seeking dental work. I'm sure glad the medical care system in the US is all about the patients and not about the profits. What would we do if people came first? Have a good day and thanks for the article. I'm facing knee replacement surgery in a couple of years, too.

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