"Essentially we realised that as you do more numbers, your results get better and your cost goes down,"
Tis tempting to just think of this as a "low rent" version of the "real" procedures that are offered at much higher costs in the west, but there really is something to just doing enormous numbers of procedures when it comes to the brutal learning of human medicine. I would not be surprised to start seeing innovations coming out of these facilites that would be impossible in the west.
Necessity is the mother of innovation. This sort of thing might invite competition in that price range. Spending millions of dollars at a hospital that's in no danger of going out of business is a lot less likely to lead to innovation than a hospital that's got to beat another one's price point that's directly sensitive to the consumer/patient.
Tis tempting to just think of this as a "low rent" version of the "real" procedures that are offered at much higher costs in the west, but there really is something to just doing enormous numbers of procedures when it comes to the brutal learning of human medicine. I would not be surprised to start seeing innovations coming out of these facilites that would be impossible in the west.