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Woman Dies After Centipede Bite in Si Racha

A 42-year-old former factory worker died after being bitten by a centipede in Si Racha, Chon Buri, with her partner claiming they could not afford treatment after discovering her social security coverage had expired.

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On 4 June 2026, rescue volunteers from the Pure Yiang Tai Foundation in Si Racha were alerted to a death at a rented room in Soi Alliance-Mab Hin Soi 6, Moo 6, Bo Win subdistrict, Si Racha district. Police from Bo Win Police Station attended the scene and found the body of Mrs Uthai, 42, a traditional Thai massage therapist who had previously worked in a factory.

She was found lying on her back with rigid legs and darkened lips. Investigators reported no signs of assault or theft.

Her boyfriend, Mr Wutthinan, 27, a security guard, said he was working a night shift when he learned that she had been bitten by a centipede at the massage shop where she worked. He collected her and took her to a private hospital because she believed she still had social security coverage from her former factory job.

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According to Mr Wutthinan, hospital staff checked her details and found that her social security entitlement had expired. He said staff asked how they wished to proceed, explaining that treatment at the private hospital would incur significant costs. He said he could not afford the fees and intended to use Thailand’s 30-baht healthcare scheme at a state hospital.

As it was late at night, the couple instead bought antihistamine and pain relief medication from a convenience store before returning home. Mr Wutthinan later returned to work and last spoke with her by telephone shortly before 5am. When she failed to answer further calls later that morning, he asked her sister to check on her and was subsequently informed that she had died.

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Pictures courtesy of Amarin

He said Mrs Uthai had a history of high blood pressure and allergic reactions to venomous animals, having previously required hospital treatment after a similar incident. He questioned whether the private hospital had provided sufficient advice and said the family would discuss possible next steps.

The hospital stated that the patient arrived between 1am and 2am complaining of foot pain and swelling after a centipede bite. Staff said she was alert and able to communicate normally. After checking her social security status, they found that her entitlement had ended and informed the couple of two nearby state hospitals when asked for recommendations. The hospital said the patient and her partner then chose to leave.

Amarin reported that authorities have sent the body for further examination to determine the exact cause of death. Family members later confirmed they did not wish to pursue legal action and said the initial death reported listed the cause of death as “unknown”. They planned to return her body to her home village of Ban Wang Ta Thao in Na Yang Klak subdistrict, Thep Sathit district, Chaiyaphum province, for funeral rites.

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image.png Adapted by ASEAN Now Amarin 7 June 2026

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Captain Flack Star Member

Captain Flack

Global Moderator

Off topic posts about Medicare removed. Reminder this topic is - “Woman Dies After Centipede Bite in Si Racha”

richard_smith237 Star Member

richard_smith237

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Liverpool Lou said:

They offered the medical care but the couple declined it in favour of the same, almost free, medical care from a state hospital that they could have gone to right from the start but chose to kick off in a private hospital!

Have you ever read the Oath that you incorrectly claim that they are bound to? Graduating physicians in Thailand take the "Physician's Pledge" (based on the World Medical Association’s Declaration of Geneva) or the Mahidol Oath, depending on their medical school.

It appears that the risks of anaphylaxis and elevated blood pressure may not have been communicated to the admitting staff at the initial hospital. Faced with treatment costs they could not afford, the couple chose to leave the private hospital and attempt to manage the situation themselves.

From that perspective, there were two key failures:

a) The couple may not have fully communicated the patient's medical condition and associated risks to the first private hospital. Had staff been made aware of the blood pressure issues and the potential for anaphylaxis, they may have responded differently.

b) The couple did not subsequently seek treatment at a state hospital, despite that being a potential alternative.

Sadly, this appears to have been a failure both to communicate critical medical information and to pursue appropriate follow-up treatment.

It is possible that the couple initially did not view the situation as an emergency.

The references to blood pressure complications and the risk of anaphylaxis may only have emerged in discussions with the media after the death, rather than being clearly raised with medical providers beforehand.

Ralf001 Star Member

Ralf001

Advanced Member
1 minute ago, richard_smith237 said:

The references to blood pressure complications and the risk of anaphylaxis may only have emerged in discussions with the media after the death, rather than being clearly raised with medical providers beforehand.

They would have checked BP in the ER Dept when she arrived.

bannork Star Member

bannork

Newsman
13 minutes ago, Ralf001 said:

They would have checked BP in the ER Dept when she arrived.

Not if they were refused treatment at reception.

Jingthing Legendary Member

Jingthing

Advanced Member
15 minutes ago, Ralf001 said:

They would have checked BP in the ER Dept when she arrived.

No.

Ralf001 Star Member

Ralf001

Advanced Member

2 minutes ago, Jingthing said:

No.

Ive been to the ER at the hospital in question, they most definately do check BP when you arrive.

Ralf001 Star Member

Ralf001

Advanced Member
5 minutes ago, bannork said:

Not if they were refused treatment at reception.

She was not refused treatment.

Jingthing Legendary Member

Jingthing

Advanced Member
32 minutes ago, Ralf001 said:

Ive been to the ER at the hospital in question, they most definately do check BP when you arrive.

Nothing mentioned about ER in the news story.

Jingthing Legendary Member

Jingthing

Advanced Member
32 minutes ago, Ralf001 said:

She was not refused treatment.

Splitting hairs. They couldn't pay. They wouldn't treat without payment. Therefore -- refused treatment. Duh.

Ralf001 Star Member

Ralf001

Advanced Member
1 minute ago, Jingthing said:

Splitting hairs. They couldn't pay. They wouldn't treat without payment. Therefore -- refused treatment. Duh.

Absolute nonsense.

Ralf001 Star Member

Ralf001

Advanced Member

2 minutes ago, Jingthing said:

Nothing mentioned about ER in the news story.

At 1am in the morning the ER Dept is the only department accessible to the public.

Jingthing Legendary Member

Jingthing

Advanced Member
1 minute ago, Ralf001 said:

At 1am in the morning the ER Dept is the only department accessible to the public.

So we're supposed to take your word for that,

Jingthing Legendary Member

Jingthing

Advanced Member
4 minutes ago, Ralf001 said:

Absolute nonsense.

You're being irrational,

Bottom line, in a better world, a case like that should have been medically evaluated and a relevant HISTORY TAKEN regardless of payment issues.

We don't live in such a world and of course much of the world would be the same.

That's all.

Jingthing Legendary Member

Jingthing

Advanced Member

Like probably most things in life, this wasn't a black and white situation.

It didn't need to turn out the way it did, but it did.

I reckon the boyfriend is feeling regrets, but I doubt the hospital administration is. That doesn't mean they shouldn't. Will they change any policy? Not likely.

Geoff914 Gold Member

Geoff914

Advanced Member
On 6/7/2026 at 1:08 AM, Ralf001 said:

Yeah they left and went home instead of going to either of the two state (public) hospitals located nearby.

Methinks my reading is perfectly fine.

In am confused, that is how I read it also.

phetaroi Platinum Member

phetaroi

Advanced Member
On 6/6/2026 at 4:33 PM, Celsius said:

3rd world country

I don't think you know the definition of a third world country. There are people right in America who die from lack of sufficient medical care.

JJ-Thailand Silver Member

JJ-Thailand

Advanced Member

I was bitten by a centipede once. Extremely painful experience even though it was not very big.

Peterphuket Platinum Member

Peterphuket

Advanced Member

Actually, a private institution calling itself a ‘hospital’ shouldn’t be allowed to use that word; ‘money-grabbing establishment’ would be a more fitting description.

Just this week I walked out of a private hospital; I had a lump on my back and wanted to have it drained, the price was between 25,000 and 30,000 THB. Once again, it has nothing to do with the Hippocratic Oath; it’s solely about how we can rake in as much money as possible.

sahibji Silver Member

sahibji

Advanced Member

Now that's a shame. Surely the hospital should treat a person and the government should have policy in place so that every citizen gets the basic health treatment.

Bruce Aussie Gold Member

Bruce Aussie

Advanced Member
On 6/7/2026 at 7:09 AM, bunnydrops said:

I was bitten by one of those once, unbelievable pain. I wouldn't be surprised if she had overdosed on painkillers.

Big boots and squash, they don't survive around our house.

wavodavo Gold Member

wavodavo

Advanced Member
On 6/7/2026 at 10:09 AM, bunnydrops said:

I was bitten by one of those once, unbelievable pain. I wouldn't be surprised if she had overdosed on painkillers.

Crikey those little critters can sure give you a nasty bite and if you've ever tried to catch one you will know how fast they can run with their 100 little feet going flat out.

Deerculler Silver Member

Deerculler

Advanced Member
On 6/7/2026 at 6:27 AM, ikke1959 said:

The oath of Hippocrates states that doctors must safe lives, nothing about insurance.. But in Thailand everything is money. This patient could have lived if the hospital just did their job.

Maybe this is a case of why 300 THB for unpaid hospital bills must be paid by tourists ...

In fact just a lack of outdated healthcare.

Doctors in Thailand do not swear to the Hippocrates oath.

They have there own oath.

Roel Advanced Member

Roel

Advanced Member

Let AI clarify this:
Almost no one uses the original Hippocratic Oath verbatim anymore, because parts of it are outdated — it forbids surgery, invokes Greek gods, and has problematic clauses by modern standards.

There is no global or national mandate in most countries. Oaths typically vary by university, even within the same country, with many schools writing their own entirely.

The most widely adopted modern alternative is the Declaration of Geneva (1948, updated 2017), created as a secular, internationally applicable replacement.

Thailand uses its own Medical Council oath, shaped by Buddhist values, but similar in spirit to the Hippocratic tradition.

MarkBR Gold Member

MarkBR

Advanced Member
On 6/7/2026 at 6:27 AM, ikke1959 said:

The oath of Hippocrates states that doctors must safe lives, nothing about insurance.. But in Thailand everything is money. This patient could have lived if the hospital just did their job.

Maybe this is a case of why 300 THB for unpaid hospital bills must be paid by tourists ...

In fact just a lack of outdated healthcare.

Private healthcare is a moral abomination. A system where money is more important than human lives

connda Star Member

connda

Advanced Member
On 6/7/2026 at 4:10 AM, Georgealbert said:

A 42-year-old former factory worker died after being bitten by a centipede in Si Racha, Chon Buri, with her partner claiming they could not afford treatment after discovering her social security coverage had expired.

That makes no sense. If she is Thai she qualifies for the Thai 30 THB health plan. All her partner needed to do it to take her to the emergency room of a local government hospital. The decision to "put it off until tomorrow" was not a wise decision.

Centipedes. I kill those critter any time I see them. I don't "hate" them, but they are dangerous.

RIP 🙏🏼

Chongalulu Platinum Member

Chongalulu

Advanced Member
18 hours ago, Jingthing said:

Splitting hairs. They couldn't pay. They wouldn't treat without payment. Therefore -- refused treatment. Duh.

They didn’t present as an immediate emergency- they then left of their own accord and had available 2 government hospitals which would have treated her immediately. They didn’t bother and went to 7-11 thereby confirming that there was no emergency,even in their own eyes . So no refusal at the private hospital treatment an emergency. Look in the mirror for the one with a deficient IQ.Duh..(sic)

bunnydrops Platinum Member

bunnydrops

Advanced Member
On 6/7/2026 at 7:09 AM, bunnydrops said:

I was bitten by one of those once, unbelievable pain. I wouldn't be surprised if she had overdosed on painkillers.

Since I got so many "?" I guess I need to explain more. The pain I felt was nothing like any bee or wasp sting. It felt like someone hit me in the shin with a hammer that lasted for hours. As for the "overdosed with painkillers," it was stated that they went and bought antihistamine and pain relief medication. Not knowing what they bought, the strength, or how many she took. Both can increase blood pressure and heart rate. She already had a history of high blood pressure.

novacova Diamond Member

novacova

Advanced Member
12 minutes ago, connda said:

That makes no sense. If she is Thai she qualifies for the Thai 30 THB health plan. All her partner needed to do it to take her to the emergency room of a local government hospital.

Depending on her previous experience with anaphylaxis. Most experience venomous anaphylaxis within an hour and once that time has passed they believe that they’re out of the woods, though it can happen up to three days after the incident. Most people globally are not educated enough about anaphylaxis reactions, folks who have been stung by bees in the past who have never had a reaction assume they’re immune and some of those folks will unfortunately die today from a simple bee sting.

PoorSucker Star Member

PoorSucker

Advanced Member

Damn, 2O year a ago my Norwegian friend was bitten twice in a week, anaphylactic shock both times.

Only creature I will kill.

If you were shoes....check.. They love moisture

PoorSucker Star Member

PoorSucker

Advanced Member
21 hours ago, Liverpool Lou said:

GoFundMe is not available in Thailand.

Yes it is but not in Thai

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