Destination Branding in Indian Medical Tourism – An Empirical Study
Date
2020
Authors
M, Sudheer Muhammed K.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Destination branding has been critically viewed as the success formula of medical tourism business
with firms realising that acquiring new customers is far more expensive than maintaining the
existing ones. It focuses on keeping the medical customers loyal, though, there is little in agreement
on which antecedents could be used to achieve this aim. In response, this thesis develops a model
of destination branding based on a review of the literature to empirically investigate in one single
model: (1) the effect of destination source credibility on place attachment and perceived value; (2)
medical tourism service quality on place attachment and perceived value; (3) destination image on
place attachment and perceived value; (4) the ultimate effect of both place attachment and
perceived value on customer loyalty. In particular, this thesis seeks to investigate the moderating
role of the perceived price reasonableness variable on study constructs (destination image, medical
tourism service quality, destination source credibility, perceived value and place attachment).
Furthermore, it presents and discusses empirical findings from a survey of 1205 medical tourists
at various hospitals examined from their perspectives as end users using structural equation
modelling (AMOS 23.0). The findings of this thesis largely support the hypothesised relationships
proposed in the theoretical model. Specifically, the results revealed that destination image, medical
tourism service quality and destination source credibility are crucial in affecting perceived value
and place attachments. The results also provide substantial evidence of the relationship between
perceived value and place attachments, which, in turn, are crucial determinants of customer
loyalty. This study contributes significantly to the very limited literature available by arriving at
medical travellers' price-dependent decisions in the international medical tourism industry. This
thesis contributes to theoretical and practical knowledge by providing for the first-time evidence
about relationships between destination images, medical tourism service quality, destination
source credibility, and analysing how perceived value and place attachments can be associated.
The inclusion of a perceived price reasonableness construct is suggested to contribute additionally
to the body of medical tourism destination branding literature and provide a complete model within
a medical service provider context. Findings imply the need for service firms in general, and
medical service providers in particular, to strategically lever on the key antecedents of customer
loyalty including perceived value and place attachments, in pursuit of a more competitive
advantage, and long-term profit.
Description
Keywords
School of Management, Medical Tourism, Destination Branding, India