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Vikesh Khetarpal
  • Male
  • New Delhi
  • India
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Latest Activity

Rob Passmore and Vikesh Khetarpal are now friends
March 4
March 1
We Just had the opportunity to sign up with Medanta Medicity and assure you of the best cost advantage and clinical skills
January 27
Vikesh Khetarpal joined a group
liposuction,tummy tuck,face lift,hair transplant,rhinoplasty
January 27
Vikesh Khetarpal joined a group
A new project from Kosansh Health Solutions to have a Global Blood and Organ Donation Registry. http://www.kosansh.com is a leading Medical Tourism Portal.
January 27
January 8
January 8
Vikesh Khetarpal received a gift from Dr.Ayyappan
January 7
January 6
December 31, 2009
Vikesh Khetarpal joined a group
Asian Medical Portal
December 29, 2009
Vikesh Khetarpal joined a group
Thailand for healthcare tourism destination.
December 28, 2009
December 27, 2009
December 25, 2009
December 25, 2009
Vikesh Khetarpal joined a group
An organization formed for the purpose of providing Travel Assistants for those in need.
December 25, 2009

Profile Information

First Name
Vikesh
Last Name
Khetarpal
Company Name
Medrefasia
Type of Organization/Company
Medical travel & facilitation, Doctor PR
What country are you from?
India
What is your interest in medical tourism?
Medrefasia is a professionally Managed Patient assistance center with a ever growing network of Consultants and Facilities. We are a sincere Medical travel company with focus on Solid Organ Transplants, Implants, Autologus Stem cell Therapies and Allogenic Stem Cell Transplants, Advanced Neurological Conditions using Brain Suite and Novellis Gamma Knife in India, Singapore and Other Facilities. We also specialize in Doctor PR and are working towards providing Regular updates to the neighborhood with domestic Health Initiative in View. We are looking forward to enhance our Knowledge base and Looking for affiliates to join hands and create a smoother bridge and wider Umbrella for Medical travel and facilitation. Our panelists include doctors from gen surgeon to a liver transplant Surgeon and work towards the comfort zone of the patient and the doctor prior to their commitment to travel. Would be great to connect and network towards a mutually beneficial relationship with a total transplarent state of affairs. Please connect at vikesh@medrefasia.com or call+919873062688.
Are you coming to the 3rd Annual World Medical Tourism and Global Health Congress, September 22-24th, 2010, which will have up to 2,000 in attendees, up to 10,000 networking meetings,over 120 sponsors and exhibitors and up to 160 speakers in Los Angeles, California?
No

10 Ways to Save on Medical Care

While the politicians debate, Ethan Ewing, president of Bills.com has put together these 10 ways to save on medical care:

1. Keep up to date with checkups – Do not skimp on care to save a few dollars, especially if a health condition requires regular monitoring. Also be sure children get all necessary vaccinations. How to save: Many insurance plans cover well-child and preventive care visits with a low or no co-payment. Or look into health care clinics (such as those offered at some drug store chains) for discount exams and vaccinations.

2. Ask for a discount – Some doctors give patients a cash discount for paying out of pocket. Patients with health insurance should be sure the physicians they see are in the network for a deeper discount on fees. How to save: Talk to the manager of patient accounts about the situation. Many providers and facilities will offer discounts of 10 percent to 50 percent for those who have lost their jobs or who can pay cash up front.

3. Save with a FSA – Anyone whose employer offers a flexible spending account (FSA) should take advantage of it. An FSA allows employees to have money deducted, pretax, from their paychecks for medical care. For a $1,000 annual deduction, employees might save up to $350 (depending on the tax bracket). How to save: Look at canceled checks, bills or credit card statements to determine how much you spent on medical care last year. Then request withholding of about 80 percent of that amount, to be safe. However, if you do not spend the full amount deducted, you will lose it.

4. Save on medications – Ask doctor if a generic medication will work as well as a brand-name one. Also investigate any possible discounts, from insurance to AARP to AAA. Mail-order pharmacies sometimes allow customers to order several months of medications at a big discount. How to save: Look at all the options, including discount medications from warehouse club and discount/chain stores, to find the best deal on needed medicines.

5. Wear a helmet – Follow the same rules children should follow: Wear a helmet while on wheels. That includes skates, scooters, bicycles, motorcycles and skateboards. Also protect heads from injury when skiing or snowboarding, horseback riding, rock climbing or engaging in other potentially risky activities. How to save: A safety helmet costs less than $30. The average cost of care for a moderate brain injury is nearly $1 million.

6. Get the flu vaccine - A flu shot or inhaled flu mist can avoid a bout of nasty illness, with days or even weeks of associated time off work. How to save: Flu shots typically cost about $25. Save more by seeking out a local nonprofit organization that counts part of the fee as a tax-deductible charitable donation.

7. Read medical bills - Some experts estimate that eight of 10 medical bills contain errors or inflated charges. How to save: Ask for an itemized bill and read it carefully. Protest any erroneous charges to negotiate a lower fee. Review payments from insurance providers for accuracy, too, since providers often require patients to pay any difference between their usual charges and what the insurance company pays.

8. Stay trim - A study released last week claims that obesity accounts for 9 percent of all U.S. medical costs. In addition, an obese person has $1,429 per year more medical costs, or about 42 percent more, than someone of normal weight. How to save: Eat moderately and exercise to keep body mass index below 30.

9. Avoid the Medicare “doughnut hole” – Medicare-eligible patients with Part D prescription coverage must watch for the coverage gap, also known as the “doughnut hole.” After patients spend a certain amount on prescription drugs, they must pay all drug costs out of pocket until they reach a higher level of prescription expenses. Currently, Medicare Part D coverage stops at $2,700 and resumes when the patient’s out-of-pocket cost reaches $6,154 per year. To make things worse, Medicare applies the entire retail cost of drugs — not just the patient’s co-payment — to the coverage limits. How to save: Ask physicians to prescribe lower-cost or generic medications whenever possible. Less-expensive drugs can help postpone entering into the doughnut hole and make the coverage gap more affordable.

10. Consider medical tourism - It sounds exotic, but it is no longer just for jetsetters. In 2007, 1.5 million people traveled just to Thailand for medical care. Even some U.S. insurers are coming on board to allow Americans to travel overseas to receive more cost-effective medical care such as knee replacement or other costly procedure How to save: Many insurance companies do not cover overseas procedures, so ask first. For those who must pay out of pocket, traveling might be worthwhile. Be sure to go to a medical facility accredited by the Joint Commission International to help ensure reliable, quality care. Medical tourism companies can help locate a reliable provider, but be sure to proceed very cautiously.



An additional tip on medical travel from Medrefasia: If your treatment costs are over US$ 800, you should talk to us!


Call us or email us for any further information that you may need.

Vikkesh Khetarpal

Mobile: +91 9873062688



And ask us about our robust safety standards, quality assurances, tight monitoring – and really good prices.



Comment Wall (7 comments)

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At 12:23am on March 1, 2010, Radhakrishnan said…
Hi Vikesh,

Good to know you.Promotion of medical travel to Kerala is the main motive as Kerala is a very popular tourist destination.Woould like to know more about your interest.
At 9:09am on January 07, 2010, Dr.Ayyappan gave Vikesh Khetarpal a gift
At 4:38am on January 6, 2010, krishnachowdari said…
Hi vikesh,
thank you for inviting me as a friend in MTC,after going through your profile, i came to know that you are concentrated on organ transplants, there are many ethical issues rotating around the transplants, do you find any difficulties with local bodies?
Regards,
Krishna
At 1:33am on December 27, 2009, Arnab Ghosh said…
Hi Vikesh,
I am yet to receive your mail. It will be appreciated if you can let me know at the earliest.
Regards,
Arnab
At 12:57pm on December 25, 2009, Arnab Ghosh said…
Hi Vikesh,
I havent received your mail. Can you kindly resend it to arnab@medipassionhealing.com
Regards,
Arnab
At 12:19pm on December 25, 2009, Ilene Little said…
Hi Vikesh,

I look forward to hearing from you and your patients about your services. You can see our blog now where we are collecting stories of real lives and real experiences , and we expect to launch our fully interactive and open market social media website in the first quarter of 2010. In the meantime the blog site is http://blogs.traveling4health.com I look forward to any first-hand reports you may have to send. We do not compete with medical tourism facilitators, we are lead generators for you. Thanks for reaching out and Happy Holidays.
At 7:24am on December 25, 2009, Arnab Ghosh said…
Hello Vikesh,
Thank you for inviting me as your friend in MTC. Having gone through your profile, I wanted to find out if you are able to facilitate kidney transplant cases since I have two patients waiting for kidney transplant.
You may write to me at arnab@medipassionhealing.com
Looking forward to hearing from you.
Regards,
Arnab
 
 

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