ChrisIsaak, congrats on your achievement and hard work up until this point! And thanks for introducing a new doctor and lengthening nail to the forum. Would you say that your hospital could be a viable option for a foreigner? Has Turkey been significantly affected by the instability in neighboring countries? I will be traveling to Turkey this summer for non-LL related reasons, but may consider consulting with your doctor if I have sufficient time.
Great questions, Tall!
My hospital (Istanbul Cerrahi) has many international patients. Most of the ones I've seen here are from Middle-Eastern countries, from Azerbaijan, and so forth. Many Europeans also travel to Turkey to get more basic cosmetic/correctional surgeries (lasik laser eye surgery, for instance). Having relatives received care in European countries and the United States, and having received medical care in the US myself as well, I would categorize these as such.. (My opinions are subjective and by all means please feel free to disagree)
United States (Best in the world, latest medical technology, but terribly expensive)
Europe (I still don't know much about Europe's medical system, however..)
Turkey (My argument is that Turkey is both CHEAPER and BETTER than Europe in medical services)
*Nevertheless, this is a broad generalization.
Other Countries (India and China seem to be cheaper, but I wouldn't prefer to do LL there.. My opinion of India is that they have very good doctors, but the nurses' training isn't on par with them.)
The only problem you would have in Turkey is the language barrier (as in any other country). Which, in that case, I would probably be around to help you out.
I don't find Dr. Inan's internal femur price very competitive (around €50,000-55,000) since it's close to its European counterparts (Guichet, Betz), but for people who know
you get what you pay for, perhaps it could be an insight. Especially to some inexperienced friends in here who made heated arguments like "Why didn't you go to Paley or Guichet?!? You idiot?!?" LOL. The answer is simple - because I'm getting the same quality of service here. The same level of safety. Similar facilities. Everything is on par, if not better. I apologize if I sound arrogant, but it's the truth.
I don't understand, for instance, why people think about getting the Salamehfix (which they'll have to keep for months on their legs) for LL rather than get LON on tibias done here for €25,000. Same price. Takes way less time to heal. Similar price to China, way better hygiene. Simple math.
In the world of politics, Turkey is a hole. It's governed by 5-year olds. The country's dynamics are
very different than Europe or the US, we are so used to political turmoil that we don't even care about it anymore. We often joke about people committing suicide in Scandinavian countries because it's too boring. Every week (Sorry, did I say week? I meant day.) we have a new political scandal, a new debate, be it the war in Syria, abortion, or the recent corruption scandal (including gold smuggling to Iran as a means to break the embargo and government officials accepting bribes) that hurt the stock exchange severely in a matter of hours. We Turks say "It's SUCH an entertaining country actually, if only we weren't its citizens!" (Although I'm a US dual citizen - ha!)
The medical world is different. When you're safe in your hospital room with the best trained doctors, nurses, and staff, you don't care about Prime Minister Erdogan babbling something which will surely lower the stock market again. When the room service brings you a $10 pizza worth $50 by taste (following the recent devaluation of the Turkish Lira against the US Dollar) you know that everything will be fine. The TV has international channels. You open up CNN and sit on your back. It suddenly stops being "LL war" and becomes "3 month holiday in lalaland".
Please let me know if you travel here. I'll be traveling to the West Coast (San Fransico, San Diego & Los Angeles) during the summer, probably also to Johannesburg, South Africa, but who knows, perhaps I might be here. I'd love to show you some hospitality!