Police bust US$145 million medical tourism scam in China
- More than 130 people arrested over con targeting rich Chinese
- They were offered free trips to US and Thailand for health checks and sold expensive ‘cancer prevention’ drugs
Police have arrested 132 people across China over a medical tourism scam targeting wealthy Chinese that netted nearly 1 billion yuan (US$145 million), according to local media.
Authorities on Thursday said they began investigating the case back in January, when a woman in Zhejiang province reported a beauty salon to police, saying she had been scammed out of 6 million yuan between 2016 and 2017, news site Thepaper.cn reported.
The beauty salon in Jiaxing had offered the woman, surnamed Wang, a free trip abroad, where she had a comprehensive medical examination and a personalised health check to identify whether she was at risk from certain diseases. She was then convinced to buy expensive “cancer prevention” medication, according to the report.
Chinese businesses have been cashing in on the rising number of affluent mainlanders seeking medical treatment overseas. Strategic research firm Global Growth Markets estimates some 500,000 Chinese travel abroad for medical tourism every year, spending at least US$10 billion annually.
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Investigators traced the scam to Dalian Silande Biotechnology, based in northeast Liaoning province, and more than 2,000 cases have been linked to the company’s operations, according to the report.
