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defib

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Posts posted by defib

  1. I am in UK and need a heart valve replaced again. NHS is free but will only do the operation when the condition gets really bad. Hoping you die before they have to operate! At Bangkok Hospital in Bangkok it shows a price of $13400 (47000 baht). This seems a fair price and the hospital is highly rated. Has anyone had experience of heart surgery there, and are there any hidden costs that there would be?

  2. I know in Issan there are plenty of places available monthly. As only 2% of tourists visit Issan, they are

    not so affected by tourist seasons I suppose! I will be in Thailand 6 months each year, say September to

    March. Cuts right across the high season. So I suppose it looks best to get a decent good value hotel in

    Lamai?

  3. Thank you gentleman, for your input. Gay? Nah, leave that one thanks. Loads of money when in Thailand? A fair bit. I suppose an older lady would be better. But ED saps all your confidence, the little blue pill even gives up the ghost on you! I suppose you can have intimacy still, but I feel I would be letting the lady down. No way round it really I suppose, so I best 'get over it'!

  4. So, next year, I am going to retire in UK, and wish to spend six months here, six months Thailand. This would keep my NHS cover here whereas, 3 months here, 9 months Thailand with 800k baht deposit in Thai bank, would lose NHS cover my GP assures me. However, I would want ALL that six months in Thailand. Now, if I get a double/triple entry from London Embassy, does it start from the day I walk out of the Embassy or, when I leave UK at the airport, or, when I arrive at Bangkok Airport? If it starts when I leave the Embassy, to get the most from it, I should jet off that day!? Or certainly within a day or two say.

    Also, I am right in thinking, this. You get 60 days arriving at Bangkok. Then, you could go to local immigration office and get 30 days more. Then, you could do a border run say to Laos, and get 60 more days again on entry. Then, go back to local immigration office and get 30 days more. Then..... that is 180 days stayed, in fact the full six months! Have I got that right!? Obviously with my retirement now so near, I really need to be sure that my knowledge is correct so appreciate confirmation, or, telling me I am, wrong! Thanks.

  5. If retired in Thailand with the required money in Thai bank and doing the 90 day visits to immigration office, how long can you return for a family visit to the UK or home country, and still keep your retirement in Thailand status? Or on each return, do you have to get a new visa to return to Thailand? I would like to return each year to UK, but am worried about possible hassle. Can anyone help explain the rules please! Thanks.

  6. Thanks for all advice. I mean, I have never seen a double entry, or triple entry, tourist visa shown on the Embassy or any Consulate websites. Only 60 day tourist visa and its cost shown. So, do you just ask for a 60 day double or triple entry tourist visa then? And they realise one, you can increase stay in Thailand to 90 day, and that then you could then do a border run and get another 90 days in Thailand? If I understand right, then this certainly is a perfect deal for me, or anyone wishing a six months stay in Thailand in each year!

  7. I have looked over a while and being a few years from aged 65, have never seen if at that age, whether you can recover your money left before 65 to stay in Thailand. As I feel it is important to have an income plus a lump sum back up in my Thailand retirement, can I include that tied up money back into the calculation from the age of 65? I will have state and private pensions paying out after 65, less than 65,000 baht a month but near, will that alone allow me to stay? If the 800,000 baht was not needed to keep retirement visa renewed from the age of 65, it would give me about 3 million baht as back up.But if still tied up, just over 2 million baht, which could be a bit low. So if anyone could answer my query it would help my planning. Thanks.

  8. I was getting all ready for my Thai retirement to Issan from UK, all problems sorted, health risks checked, then.........dengue fever, and, high in Loei province. Hoping to settle in Loei however, I am on Warfarin, the blood thinner for my heart valve replacement. Dengue fever causes haemorrhaging. Haemorrhaging and warfarin equals, at best long stay hospital emergency, or worse, death. How dangerous would it be with this latest outbreak, for me now in Thailand? Also, anyone taking warfarin or similar currently in Thailand, how vulnerable do you feel? Are you able to keep risk of infection to a minimum, without wearing protection clothing head to toe!?

  9. One thing for sure, Udon will not gain much on the tourist trail. Rental properties available in Udon can be counted on two hands, no tourist company having issan let alone Udon as a destination to visit, very little to see, Chiang Mai, Phuket or Pattaya it is not. And why Bangkok yuppies would come to a place that is the butt of their jokes is a mystery. It will be, no doubt, become a busier Thai market town, but never a 'boom town'!!!

  10. Thanks for all replies which have been very useful to me indeed. Yes just to agree with Sheryl, Furosemide is a tablet for among other uses is taken to help regulate blood pressure. Meatboy prices are well reasonable on three of my drugs, but all in all, the prices given in this thread on all the medications, it seems i will have no problem on affordability in Thailand. Thanks again!

  11. Oh, looking through posts again. First, I should lose almost 50 pounds in weight myself, well more 30 pounds perhaps, making all my conditions easier. The 'new' diet starts soon! Also, no-one will insure me but will have a couple of million baht set aside for health emergencies. I had my heart operation private here in UK as NHS failed to monitor my condition properly, and that cost nearly two million baht. Who knows what the future holds for your health I suppose, we just have to our best.

  12. Thanks for all the extensive information on both cost of drugs and also local best pharmacies! The fact I believe there is no established GP service in Thailand, does give me some concern, but I do have a recommended Doctor at a local hospital that I can approach for ongoing health concerns. Although I will probably settle in the North East, i will certainly check out the Bangkok pharmacies recommended in my next trip. From my point of view, all the replies with prices and advice, have given me the confidence to plan my Thai retirement knowing that the availability, and cost of my medications, will not be a major problem, so once again thanks to all those who have posted!

  13. Thanks for replies, I really appreciate it. Looking like blood pressure tablets not too expensise which is good. Although natural blood pressure ideas are excellent, my blood pressure has to be low because of a heart valve replacement, and I can't really experiment with other treatments. My need for acid reflux tablets, is for a hiatus hernia, and so again have to be powerful. So, news they are not too expensive, is really good to hear also. When you come from UK where all drugs are free when you are over aged 60, the costs of drugs in the country you wish to retire to, is extremely important!

  14. I am over 60, have money to put 80k in Thai bank, have friends in Thailand, but, with many presciption drugs here in UK, can I afford to live there in retirement. On Thai Visa, I found one of my drugs, Warfarin, and that did not too much to buy there at a pharmacy or hospital. But I know that Warfarin is a cheap drug anyway, being a small piece of rat poison! Anyway the drugs I would need are:

    Candesartan 16mg......blood pressure.

    Amlodipine 10mg......blood pressure.

    Furosemide 20mg......blood pressure.

    Omeprazole 20mg......Acid reflux.

    Domperidone 10mg......Acid reflux.

    Budesonide/formoterol 200/6.......Asthma.

    I want these for personal use, backed by UK GP notes. I am not in Thailand again until later this year to check for myself, so just wondered if some light could be put on the subject by Thai Visa members now. I could probably afford about £100 (5000 baht) for a months supply of above drugs, but not too much more. I fear Blighty may be my only option with my health problems. Great!

  15. Sorry for being unclear. What it is, is that at the beginning I'd spend 6 months in one stretch in Thailand, looking after my own health there. Then, return to UK for NHS care for six months. Once I retire to Thailand I will have enough for 800k in Thai bank, and am over 60 now. But tourist visa from UK only up to 60 day isn't it? I'd need 180 days so that needs multi entry O visa?

  16. I am new to Thai Visa, so hello! I want to spend 6 months a year in Thailand so I can keep NHS care in UK (my GP said this is okay!). I want to do all 12 months soon as I am near retirement age, but need to know first if I can take care of my health problems in Thailand, and get all my tablets and care. So, do I need multi entry O visa for that and do I need to leave the country after 90 days to activate the second 90 days? I apologise if it doesn't completely fit in with this thread, but well, pretty similar I think!? Hoping for help........Thanks.

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