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Int J Equity Health. 2013 Dec 01;12:94. doi: 10.1186/1475-9276-12-94.

Knowledge brokers, companions, and navigators: a qualitative examination of informal caregivers' roles in medical tourism.

International journal for equity in health

Victoria Casey, Valorie A Crooks, Jeremy Snyder, Leigh Turner

Affiliations

  1. Department of Geography, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. [email protected].

PMID: 24289231 PMCID: PMC3879033 DOI: 10.1186/1475-9276-12-94

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Many studies examining the phenomena of medical tourism have identified health equity issues associated with this global health services practice. However, there is a notable lack of attention in this existing research to the informal care provided by the friends and family members who typically accompany medical tourists abroad. To date, researchers have not examined the care roles filled by informal caregivers travelling with medical tourists. In this article, we fill this gap by examining these informal caregivers and the roles they take on towards supporting medical tourists' health and wellbeing.

METHODS: We conducted 21 interviews with International Patient Coordinators (IPCs) working at medical tourism hospitals across ten countries. IPCs work closely with informal caregivers as providers of non-medical personal assistance, and can therefore offer broad insight on caregiver roles. The interviews were coded and analyzed thematically.

RESULTS: Three roles emerged: knowledge broker, companion, and navigator. As knowledge brokers, caregivers facilitate the transfer of information between the medical tourist and formal health care providers as well as other staff members at medical tourism facilities. The companion role involves providing medical tourists with physical and emotional care. Meanwhile, responsibilities associated with handling documents and coordinating often complex journeys are part of the navigation role.

CONCLUSIONS: This is the first study to examine informal caregiving roles in medical tourism. Many of the roles identified are similar to those of conventional informal caregivers while others are specific to the transnational context. We conclude that these roles make informal caregivers an integral part of the larger phenomenon of medical tourism. We further contend that examining the roles taken on by a heretofore-unconsidered medical tourism stakeholder group sheds valuable insight into how this industry operates and that such knowledge is necessary in order to respond to the health equity debates that surround this particular global health services practice.

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