Health Tourism in a Developed Country with a Dominant Tourism Market: The Case of the United States' Travellers to Canada

Keywords

developed countries; Health tourism; price and volume effects; tourism demand

Abstract

Health tourism is a booming billion-dollar business, which has attracted the attention of academia and industry. Most of the research conducted on health tourism has been conceptual or has mainly focused on health tourism activities from developed to developing countries. This study investigates the impact of tourism demand on health-related tourism spending in a developed country (Canada) with a dominant tourism market (United States (U.S.)). The study considers both volume and price effects of health tourism during the period of 1986–2016, by applying time-series analysis, including unit root and cointegration testing and application of autoregressive distribution lag modelling. The results show a positive long-term effect of U.S. tourism demand on overall health-related tourism spending in Canada, but varying results when considering the volume and price dimensions. The findings provide further insights for managing the niche business of health tourism in Canada.

Publication Date

2-1-2021

Original Citation

Salehi-Esfahani, S., Ridderstaat, J., & Ozturk, A. B. (2021). Health tourism in a developed country with a dominant tourism market: the case of the United States’ travellers to Canada. Current Issues in Tourism, 24(4), 536–553. https://doi.org/10.1080/13683500.2020.1724081

Document Type

Paper

Language

English

Source Title

Current Issues in Tourism

Volume

24

Issue

4

College

Rosen College of Hospitality Management

Location

Rosen College of Hospitality Management

This document is currently not available for download.


Share

COinS