Diasporic Medical Tourism: examining tourists’ profiles, antecedents and behavioural intention

Authors

  • Aneta Mathijsen Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), Collegium of World Economy. Email: amathi@sgh.waw.pl
  • Ewa Barbara Dziedzic Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), Collegium of World Economy, Institute of International Economic Policy, Tourism Economy Research Unit. Email: edziedz@sgh.waw.pl

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54055/ejtr.v37i.3010

Abstract

This study focuses on diasporic medical tourism (DMT), an offshoot of migration-led tourism and medical tourism. There has been growing recognition of the significance of a diasporic dimension of medical tourism worldwide, yet little is known about these travellers, especially quantitatively. This paper examines the antecedents and behavioural intention of the DMT by applying the extended Theory of Planned Behaviour. A cross-sectional survey was conducted in three European countries (Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg) among the Polish diaspora (N=1,288), which constitutes one of the largest migrant populations in Europe. The results analysed via PLS-SEM demonstrated that the model explained 53 % of the variance (R²= 0.527, Q²= 0.392), indicating a good model fit. Constructs of Attitude (β = 0.329), Subjective Norms (β = 0.277), Perceived Behavioural Control (β = 0.112), and Past Behaviour (β = 0.302) were all statistically significant. The caring/affective/trusting relationship with doctors, familiarity with the system, second opinion, encouragement/recommendation from referents, and facilitating factors influenced the decisions to undertake the DMT. ‘Committed’ and ‘Contended’ travellers accounted for 76% of all surveyed diasporic medical travellers, indicating the significant potential of those ‘hidden’ medical travellers. Diasporic medical tourism was compared to foreign medical tourism. This study provides theoretical/practical implications and contributes to the research on medical tourism, diaspora tourism and the interrelation between tourism and migration, specifically in the European context.

Author Biographies

Aneta Mathijsen, Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), Collegium of World Economy. Email: amathi@sgh.waw.pl

AM is a Doctorate candidate in Management at the Collegium of World Economy, Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), Poland. She holds an MSc in Marketing and an MRes in International Relations. She is currently working on health-related projects in the EU context. Previously, she worked on global health diplomacy (UK, Belgium and Uganda), and in strategic marketing for profit (P&G, Coca Cola, Bvlgari) and non-profit organizations. Her main research interests are medical tourism/travel, diasporic tourism/travel, motivational theories, personalized medicine, and the commodification of health care

Ewa Barbara Dziedzic, Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), Collegium of World Economy, Institute of International Economic Policy, Tourism Economy Research Unit. Email: edziedz@sgh.waw.pl

EBD is an Associate professor in Warsaw Scholl of Economics (SGH), Tourism Economy research Unit. In research and teaching, she focuses on the problems of the impact of tourism on destinations, development of the tourism market, the competitiveness of the tourism economy and marketing research in tourism. She participated in methodological works on the implementation of the tourism satellite account in Poland, first as a member of a team at the Central Statistical Office and then as a leader of teams preparing and developing the methodology of the account in Poland and its subsequent editions, also took part in the research funded by EUROSTAT.  Research interests: development of tourism market, marketing of tourism services, effects of tourism development, tourism as a factor of regional and local development, role of the public sector in tourism development, medical tourism.

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Published

2024-04-12

How to Cite

Mathijsen, A., & Dziedzic, E. . (2024). Diasporic Medical Tourism: examining tourists’ profiles, antecedents and behavioural intention. European Journal of Tourism Research, 37, 3702. https://doi.org/10.54055/ejtr.v37i.3010