Abstract
Recently, health tourism has gained a lot of importance in South Asia as numerous people across the world acquire medical care in countries such as Pakistan and India. Health tourism is defined as patients and public traveling abroad for seeking quality and affordable medical treatment which is often not available in their home country. Literature on health tourism engages with different dimensions of health trade such as, cross-border movement of people but hardly reflect on the nature of obstacles people face in obtaining health care. By focusing on health tourism, this study explores key challenges and potential benefits of health trade between India and Pakistan. The study considers the perception and opinion of doctors, private sector organizations, state officials, businessmen and traders in Pakistan as primary sources of knowing the bottlenecks in undertaking and promoting cross-border trade in health sector. The patients in Pakistan seeking medical treatment in India encounter; informational, financial and visa related problems. These patients heavily rely on informal channels in acquiring visa which leads to frustration, delays and financial obligations of uncertain nature. The prevailing inhospitable and security situation also discourages movement of doctors and patients across the border. The study also notes that variants of health sector trade between the two countries have also not received adequate attention in policy circles.