Using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the English-speaking Caribbean

Medical tourism is a relatively recent global economic and political phenomenon which has assumed increasing importance for developing countries, particularly in Asia. It has been slower to develop within the context of the tourism industry in English-speaking Caribbean countries but there is eviden...

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Main Authors: Chambers, D., McIntosh, Bryan
Format: Article
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/6526
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-65262019-08-31T03:03:18Z Using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the English-speaking Caribbean Chambers, D. McIntosh, Bryan Tourism Medical sociology World economy Competitive advantage Economic development Economics Caribbean English language Developing countries Competitiveness Marketization Developing countries--LDCs Medical tourism Niche marketing Health care access Medical tourism is a relatively recent global economic and political phenomenon which has assumed increasing importance for developing countries, particularly in Asia. It has been slower to develop within the context of the tourism industry in English-speaking Caribbean countries but there is evidence that the tourism policy makers in the region perceive medical tourism as a potentially lucrative niche market. However, while the potential of medical tourism has seemingly been embraced by the region's political directorate, there has been limited discussion of the extent to which this market niche can realistically provide competitive advantage for the region. The argument of this conceptual paper is that the English-speaking Caribbean cannot hope to compete successfully in the global medical tourism market with many developing world destinations in Asia, or even with other Caribbean countries such as Cuba, on factors such as low cost, staff expertise, medical technological capability, investment in healthcare facilities or even in terms of the natural resources of sun, sea and sand. Rather, in order to achieve competitive advantage the countries of the region should, on the one hand, identify and develop their unique resources and competences as they relate to medical tourism, while, on the other hand, they should exploit the demand of the postmodern tourist for authentic experiences. Both these supply and demand side issues, it is argued, can be addressed through the development of a medical tourism product that utilises the region's indigenous herbal remedies. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]; Medical tourism is a relatively recent global economic and political phenomenon which has assumed increasing importance for developing countries, particularly in Asia. It has been slower to develop within the context of the tourism industry in English-speaking Caribbean countries but there is evidence that the tourism policy makers in the region perceive medical tourism as a potentially lucrative niche market. However, while the potential of medical tourism has seemingly been embraced by the region's political directorate, there has been limited discussion of the extent to which this market niche can realistically provide competitive advantage for the region. The argument of this conceptual paper is that the English-speaking Caribbean cannot hope to compete successfully in the global medical tourism market with many developing world destinations in Asia, or even with other Caribbean countries such as Cuba, on factors such as low cost, staff expertise, medical technological capability, investment in healthcare facilities or even in terms of the natural resources of sun, sea and sand. Rather, in order to achieve competitive advantage the countries of the region should, on the one hand, identify and develop their unique resources and competences as they relate to medical tourism, while, on the other hand, they should exploit the demand of the postmodern tourist for authentic experiences. Both these supply and demand side issues, it is argued, can be addressed through the development of a medical tourism product that utilises the region's indigenous herbal remedies. Reprinted by permission of Carfax Publishing, Taylor & Francis Ltd. 2014-10-21T16:24:07Z 2014-10-21T16:24:07Z 2008 article Chambers, D. and McIntosh, B. (2008). Using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the English-speaking Caribbean. Third World quarterly, 29 (5), 919-937. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/6526 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01436590802106056
collection NDLTD
format Article
sources NDLTD
topic Tourism
Medical sociology
World economy
Competitive advantage
Economic development
Economics
Caribbean
English language
Developing countries
Competitiveness
Marketization
Developing countries--LDCs
Medical tourism
Niche marketing
Health care access
spellingShingle Tourism
Medical sociology
World economy
Competitive advantage
Economic development
Economics
Caribbean
English language
Developing countries
Competitiveness
Marketization
Developing countries--LDCs
Medical tourism
Niche marketing
Health care access
Chambers, D.
McIntosh, Bryan
Using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the English-speaking Caribbean
description Medical tourism is a relatively recent global economic and political phenomenon which has assumed increasing importance for developing countries, particularly in Asia. It has been slower to develop within the context of the tourism industry in English-speaking Caribbean countries but there is evidence that the tourism policy makers in the region perceive medical tourism as a potentially lucrative niche market. However, while the potential of medical tourism has seemingly been embraced by the region's political directorate, there has been limited discussion of the extent to which this market niche can realistically provide competitive advantage for the region. The argument of this conceptual paper is that the English-speaking Caribbean cannot hope to compete successfully in the global medical tourism market with many developing world destinations in Asia, or even with other Caribbean countries such as Cuba, on factors such as low cost, staff expertise, medical technological capability, investment in healthcare facilities or even in terms of the natural resources of sun, sea and sand. Rather, in order to achieve competitive advantage the countries of the region should, on the one hand, identify and develop their unique resources and competences as they relate to medical tourism, while, on the other hand, they should exploit the demand of the postmodern tourist for authentic experiences. Both these supply and demand side issues, it is argued, can be addressed through the development of a medical tourism product that utilises the region's indigenous herbal remedies. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]; Medical tourism is a relatively recent global economic and political phenomenon which has assumed increasing importance for developing countries, particularly in Asia. It has been slower to develop within the context of the tourism industry in English-speaking Caribbean countries but there is evidence that the tourism policy makers in the region perceive medical tourism as a potentially lucrative niche market. However, while the potential of medical tourism has seemingly been embraced by the region's political directorate, there has been limited discussion of the extent to which this market niche can realistically provide competitive advantage for the region. The argument of this conceptual paper is that the English-speaking Caribbean cannot hope to compete successfully in the global medical tourism market with many developing world destinations in Asia, or even with other Caribbean countries such as Cuba, on factors such as low cost, staff expertise, medical technological capability, investment in healthcare facilities or even in terms of the natural resources of sun, sea and sand. Rather, in order to achieve competitive advantage the countries of the region should, on the one hand, identify and develop their unique resources and competences as they relate to medical tourism, while, on the other hand, they should exploit the demand of the postmodern tourist for authentic experiences. Both these supply and demand side issues, it is argued, can be addressed through the development of a medical tourism product that utilises the region's indigenous herbal remedies. Reprinted by permission of Carfax Publishing, Taylor & Francis Ltd.
author Chambers, D.
McIntosh, Bryan
author_facet Chambers, D.
McIntosh, Bryan
author_sort Chambers, D.
title Using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the English-speaking Caribbean
title_short Using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the English-speaking Caribbean
title_full Using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the English-speaking Caribbean
title_fullStr Using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the English-speaking Caribbean
title_full_unstemmed Using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the English-speaking Caribbean
title_sort using authenticity to achieve competitive advantage in medical tourism in the english-speaking caribbean
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/6526
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