Healthcare Guide for American Travelers: Managing Illness and Using Insurance
Falling ill during business trips or vacations in America is not uncommon. However, America's healthcare system differs significantly from Japan's, and without prior knowledge, you may face unexpected costs and complicated procedures. This article provides practical information from a pharmacist's perspective, covering preparations before departure, how to seek care locally, and how to use insurance effectively.
Basic Structure of the American Healthcare System
Characteristics of the Medical System
America's healthcare system is fundamentally different from Japan's insurance-based medical system. Understanding these three key points is essential:
Private Practice is the Standard In America, medical fees have no uniform pricing; each healthcare facility sets its own rates freely. The same test can cost several times more at different hospitals.
Freedom in Choosing Physicians Unless enrolled in a network insurance plan (HMO, PPO, etc.), you can visit any healthcare facility, but you will bear the full cost.
High Medical Costs A doctor's visit for a cold typically costs hundreds of dollars, an ambulance ride thousands of dollars, and hospital care is generally tens of thousands of dollars. Seeking care without insurance is extremely dangerous.
Role of Primary Care Physician (PCP)
Many insurance plans, especially HMOs, require you to first see a Primary Care Physician (PCP)—essentially your main physician. Without a PCP referral, specialist visits carry significantly higher out-of-pocket costs.
Pre-Departure Preparation: Five Essential Steps
1. Obtain Overseas Travel Insurance
This is the most critical step. Select a Japanese overseas travel insurance plan that includes the following coverage items:
| Coverage Item | Recommended Amount | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Medical Expenses | $3,000 or more | Medical costs in America are very high |
| Dental Treatment | $300 or more | Emergency treatment only |
| Emergency Evacuation | Unlimited | Inter-state transport costs tens of thousands of yen |
| Disease Death Benefit | $1,000 or more | Protection against worst-case scenarios |
Large providers such as JTB, AIG, Sompo Japan, and Mitsui Sumitomo Marine typically offer plans for 90 days or less. For stays of three months or longer, consider local travel insurance or American student insurance plans.
Pharmacist's note Documents required for insurance claims: physician's diagnosis (in English), receipt issued by healthcare facility, and itemized statement. Requesting the healthcare facility complete an "Insurance claim form" will streamline the process.
2. Compile Medical History and Current Medications
Create an English-language medical information card and keep it with you at all times. Include the following information:
- Blood type
- Allergies (medications and food)
- Medical history (especially hypertension, diabetes, heart disease)
- Current prescription medications (including generic names)
- Emergency contact information
Allergy information is top priority. Clearly state it in the format: "I am allergic to..."
3. Prepare Over-the-Counter and Prescription Medications
| Medication | Preparation in Japan | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pain reliever | Ibuprofen 200mg (Ibu, etc.) | Headache, fever | Also available over-the-counter in America (Advil, Motrin) |
| Cold medicine | Combination cold remedy | Nasal congestion, sore throat | Multi-ingredient products are regulated in the US |
| Digestive aid | Biofermin, Biofermin S | Diarrhea | Protects against diarrhea from water quality changes |
| Stomach medicine | Otastaman, Famotidine | Stomach discomfort | H2-blockers are well-known in the US |
| Topical skin medicine | Muhi AH, Diaphragm | Insect bites | Limited medical options in many regions |
| Eye drops | Shin Ryokusui, Algard | Dry eyes | Prevents dry eyes during flights |
| Sleep aid | Physician-prescribed sleep medication | Jet lag | May trigger drug screening concerns |
Pharmacist's note When bringing prescription medications, always carry an English-language prescription from your physician. This avoids the risk of being suspected of "drug trafficking" at American airports. Particular caution is needed for sleep medications, psychiatric drugs, and antidepressants.
4. Research Available Healthcare Facilities
Before traveling, identify and save the following information on your smartphone:
- Urgent Care near your accommodations: Handles minor to moderate acute illness. Many operate 24 hours
- Location of general hospitals and their Emergency Rooms (ER)
- Healthcare facilities with Japanese-speaking physicians (contact the Japanese consulate in your destination city)
You can search on Google Maps for "Urgent Care near me" or "Japanese speaking doctor."
5. Confirm Emergency Contact Numbers
| Service | Number | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency | 911 | Life-threatening situations requiring ambulance |
| Japanese Consulate in America | Varies by location | Medical facility referrals, document preparation |
| Consular Protection Center | Varies by country | Medical complications and related advice |
What to Do If You Become Ill Locally
Symptom-Specific Management
Mild Symptoms (Cold, Headache, Stomach Pain)
- Request a physician referral from your hotel front desk
- Consult with a pharmacist at a drugstore (CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid)
- Use Telemedicine (online consultation)
- Rest at home and use over-the-counter medications
Moderate Symptoms (High fever, vomiting, severe diarrhea lasting 12+ hours)
- Visit an Urgent Care facility
- Present your insurance information (ID card)
- Pay after consultation (credit card or cash)
Severe Symptoms (Chest pain, difficulty breathing, loss of consciousness, heavy bleeding)
- Immediately call 911
- Describe your symptoms and location in English (use voice translation apps if necessary)
- Transport by ambulance to hospital
- Contact your insurance company afterward
Pharmacist's note Telemedicine services (Amwell, Doctor on Demand, MDLive, etc.) can be accessed via app. Physician consultation fees are typically $30–$50. Prescriptions are emailed to local pharmacies and filled for $10–$30. This is highly effective for jet lag and mild discomfort.
Consulting with Drugstore Pharmacists
At American drugstores, you can consult directly with a Pharmacist. If you describe your symptoms, they can recommend over-the-counter medications and advise whether to see a physician.
English phrases for describing symptoms:
- "I have a bad cold with high fever and sore throat."
- "I have diarrhea and stomach pain for 2 days."
- "I have a severe headache and nausea."
If uncertain, you can use translation apps (Google Translate, iTranslate) to convert Japanese to English and show the pharmacist.
How to Seek Care at Hospitals and Clinics
Step 1: Choosing a Facility and Making an Appointment
Urgent Care visits are the standard approach. Here's why:
- No appointment necessary (walk-in available)
- Extended hours (most operate 9:00 AM–9:00 PM or later)
- Lower costs than hospital ERs (consultation fees $100–$300)
- Relatively short wait times (30 minutes to 2 hours)
If an appointment is needed, find the phone number on Google Maps and call directly, or use ZocDoc (a medical appointment app).
Step 2: Initial Appointment Procedures
Items to Bring:
- Passport (identification)
- Insurance card
- Credit card for payment
- English-language medical information card
Forms to Complete: You will receive a "New Patient Form" to fill out with the following information:
- Name, date of birth, passport number
- Current address (place of stay)
- Insurance information
- Allergy information
- Current symptoms and duration
- Emergency contact
Pharmacist's note When entering insurance information, accurately record the "Group Number," "Member ID," and "Plan Type." Errors can affect subsequent billing.
Step 3: Examination and Testing
A physician (MD/DO) or advanced practice provider (NP/PA) will interview you about your symptoms. Testing may include:
- Blood test
- Urinalysis
- Chest X-ray
- Strep test (throat culture)
These are added to the consultation fee. Confirm testing costs in advance.
Step 4: Prescription and Payment
The physician issues a prescription in one of two ways:
You receive the prescription to fill at a pharmacy:
- Fill at the facility's in-house pharmacy or a nearby drugstore
- Dispensing fee: $5–$30
The facility dispenses medication immediately:
- You receive medication on the day of your visit
Typical payment flow:
- Consultation fee: $100–$300
- Lab fee: $50–$500 (varies by test)
- Prescription processing fee: Free to $10
- Total: $150–$800
Credit card is standard. If using insurance, the insurer will bill you afterward.
Using Medical Insurance
Submitting Overseas Travel Insurance Claims
| Step | Action | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Immediately after visit | Request healthcare facility to complete "Insurance claim form" | Same day |
| 2. Within one week | Obtain English-language diagnosis and receipt from facility | As soon as possible |
| 3. Within 30 days of return | Mail all claim documents to Japanese insurance company | Required |
| 4. Two to four weeks after submission | Receive response and reimbursement from insurer | Typical timeframe |
Claim Document Checklist:
- Insurance claim form (provided by insurance company)
- Receipt from healthcare facility (in English)
- Physician's diagnosis (in English)
- Copy of passport
- Copy of insurance policy
American Private Insurance Plans
For long-term stays (three months or more), consider enrolling in American insurance:
| Plan Type | Features | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|---|
| HMO | Network facilities only; PCP referral required | $100–$300 |
| PPO | Out-of-network care available but higher out-of-pocket | $200–$600 |
| EPO | Hybrid of HMO and PPO | $150–$450 |
| Marketplace | Offered through Affordable Care Act; subsidies available based on income | $0–$400 |
Student Insurance for International Students: Many American universities require student insurance. Annual cost: $1,000–$3,000.
Pharmacist's note With Marketplace insurance (ACA), most plans cover prescription medications. Copays are tiered by drug category; generic medications typically cost $5–$50 per prescription.