This section provides factual reference information on medical and dental procedures commonly sought through medical tourism. Each procedure page includes international price ranges, typical recovery times, common risks, key considerations, and questions you should ask any clinic before proceeding.
Price ranges reflect what international patients typically pay at clinics abroad — not domestic costs in the US, UK, or other high-income countries. Prices vary significantly by country, clinic, surgeon experience, and specific clinical requirements. Always confirm what is and is not included in any quoted price.
General Surgery
Hernia Repairgeneral surgery
Hernia repair surgically corrects a protrusion of tissue (most commonly fat, omentum or bowel) through a weakness in the abdominal wall. The most common varieties are inguinal (groin), femoral, umbilical, epigastric, and incisional hernias; surgical principles are similar across all but operative approach varies. Two main techniques exist: open repair, in which the surgeon accesses the hernia through a single incision and reinforces the defect with sutures and/or a synthetic mesh, and laparoscopic (or robotic) repair, which uses small ports and a camera to place mesh from the inside of the abdominal wall. NICE TA160 supports the laparoscopic approach for selected primary unilateral inguinal hernias and for bilateral and recurrent cases, where it is associated with faster return to activity at the cost of slightly longer operating time. The choice of approach depends on hernia type, size, prior surgery, patient comorbidity and surgeon experience. Synthetic mesh has become the standard of care for most adult repairs because of materially lower recurrence rates than primary suture repair, though the trade-off is a small risk of mesh-related chronic pain or infection.
Laparoscopic Hernia Repairgeneral surgery
Laparoscopic hernia repair is a minimally invasive technique in which the hernia defect is approached from inside the abdominal wall using small ports and a camera, with mesh placed in the preperitoneal space to reinforce the defect. The two main variants are transabdominal preperitoneal (TAPP) repair, which enters the abdominal cavity, and totally extraperitoneal (TEP) repair, which dissects the preperitoneal space without entering the peritoneum. Compared to open repair, laparoscopic approaches offer faster return to normal activity, lower acute pain, and better cosmesis — at the cost of a longer operative time, the requirement for general anaesthesia, and a steeper learning curve for the surgeon.