Jump to content

Private hospitals ordered to display medicine prices


rooster59

Recommended Posts

24 minutes ago, rooster59 said:

Hospitals are also required to disclose pricing details in QR code form, allowing the general public to access the information conveniently. Patients who wish to purchase medicine outside the hospital must have a prescription signed by a doctor, with the common and scientific name of medicine, and pricing clearly displayed.

I can't workout why the price has to be on the prescription?

  • Confused 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Failure to comply will result in up to 1 year imprisonment or up to 20,000 baht fine.

 

I think they missed a few zeros in the penalty mount?  Or someone is taking the piss?

 

Edited by kotsak
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

43 minutes ago, JoePai said:

Unless you are new to Thailand, everyone knows the Private Hospitals inflate the price of medicines. Therefore instead of moaning simply ask the Doctor for the prescription and buy the medicines at your local pharmacy !...

When was the last time you got a prescription from a doctor at a private hospital in Thailand and at what hospital was this?

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, bdenner said:

Not before time having been ripped off by the Bangkok Hospital in Udon Thani for 17700 Baht for a ONE month supply of blood thinners and other pills that were not required. Very naive on my part AND will not happen again after going straight to Adelaide to see a specialist for a 2nd opinion. I picked a 6 month supply of thinners there for AUD $132.00 (2900 Baht).

Do remember private hospitals are there to make as much profit as possible, will do anything to raise your bill.

Go to a state run hospital to get a much lower bill, or to a state run clinic, or to a state run university hospital.

Mostly the same doctor, longer waiting sometimes, or pay a little extra and go to the evening practice.

By the way, acidum acetylsalicilicum, or aspirine 81 mg is a good bloodthinner, it seems.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When was the last time you got a prescription from a doctor at a private hospital in Thailand and at what hospital was this?
They will probably charge extra for a prescription. I got one from Bangkok Pattaya once which i didn't really want but she did it anyway and guess what, a higher bill
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The private hospital that I visited a month ago didn't even show the individual prices for the medicine on the bill, they just lumped them together under one charge.

 

After googling the various medicines to get an idea of the price, I reckon they overcharged me somewhere in the region of 60%. That said, I thought the doctor charges and x-ray costs were very good.

Link to comment
Share on other sites



The private hospital that I visited a month ago didn't even show the individual prices for the medicine on the bill, they just lumped them together under one charge.
 



That's exactly how they do it, they won't give you a breakdown pre paying unless you ask for it and if you do they will look at you as if you've asked for something really strange. Its not just the high prices but the unnecessary medication included
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, bluesofa said:

I can't workout why the price has to be on the prescription?

If private hospitals  have to post prices, local pharmacies will check them and adjust THEIR prices to be close to them.-----lose lose

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, bdenner said:

Not before time having been ripped off by the Bangkok Hospital in Udon Thani for 17700 Baht for a ONE month supply of blood thinners and other pills that were not required. Very naive on my part AND will not happen again after going straight to Adelaide to see a specialist for a 2nd opinion. I picked a 6 month supply of thinners there for AUD $132.00 (2900 Baht).

Agree with you. I gave my pharmacist the receipt yesterday  for last batch of 7000 baht antibiotics from the same group you mentioned. All of them she said were 50% mark up on what she charges. Learnt the hard way.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If private hospitals  have to post prices, local pharmacies will check them and adjust THEIR prices to be close to them.-----lose lose
local pharmacies already charge inflated prices, you have to go to Fascino which seem to have fair prices
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, scubascuba3 said:


 

 


That's exactly how they do it, they won't give you a breakdown pre paying unless you ask for it and if you do they will look at you as if you've asked for something really strange. Its not just the high prices but the unnecessary medication included

 

Nonsense. All you have to do is ask, and.then they print you out the insurance claim statement. Same as any hospital anywhere in the world. What moaners you Brits are

  • Like 2
  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, JoePai said:

Unless you are new to Thailand, everyone knows the Private Hospitals inflate the price of medicines. Therefore instead of moaning simply ask the Doctor for the prescription and buy the medicines at your local pharmacy !

Note : these are Private Hospitals with shareholders that want returns (like any other company) so they should be able to charge what they want. If you do not like it then simply go to another hospital or use the Government hospitals – what can be simpler than that ?

Nothing wrong with that at all; provided they fully disclose the price of all medicines and services before you buy. Lotus, Tops etc are all in the business of making profits, however the price of every single item is displayed so people can choose to accept or decline.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Puccini said:

When was the last time you got a prescription from a doctor at a private hospital in Thailand and at what hospital was this?

 

3 hours ago, scubascuba3 said:


 

 


That's exactly how they do it, they won't give you a breakdown pre paying unless you ask for it and if you do they will look at you as if you've asked for something really strange. Its not just the high prices but the unnecessary medication included

 

Exactly my experience too. You wouldn’t pay a meal or garage bill without seeing the bill first, hospitals act as if this is a strange system to see the bill before paying. 

 

They got away with it for so long because of those with health insurance covering the costs not caring how much the bill was. 

 

Edited by NightSky
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, rooster59 said:

The Ministry of Commerce has implemented a new measure after announcing medicine and medical supplies as controlled items

 

7 hours ago, rooster59 said:

Failure to comply will result in up to 1 year imprisonment or up to 20,000 baht fine.

I can appreciate the MoC enforcing the new ministry policy with a civil (aka administrative) penalty for noncompliance. In some ways the pricing penalty is consistent with the government's current legal authority to place price controls on products.

  • If there was a conspiracy of one or more persons among hospital-related individuals to violate pricing requirements, should they be collectively fined or individually fined as opposed to the hospital in general?
  • Imprisonment constitutes a criminal violation and must be mandated by a federal law, ie., one passed by the National Assembly. The MoC as part of the Executive Branch has no legal authority to establish punitive sentences for criminal violations, especially with the lack of legal judicial due process, ie., trial, judgement, appeals for the accused.

The new measure is directed at private hospitals. Obviously, one can fine a hospital as a corporate entity but one cannot send the hospital to prison. So who goes to jail - the majority shareholder, Chairman of the Board of Directors, CEO, Department Director, Doctor, Nurse, Accountant, Cashier, etc.? As such, the imprisonment threat makes no sense.

If imprisonment provision is dropped and replaced with an additional civil punitive damage penalty that is based, ie., on the severity of the violation, then the consequence of violation becomes more predictable and sensible with no legislative action required.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, rooster59 said:

Hospitals are also required to disclose pricing details in QR code form, allowing the general public to access the information conveniently.

bs.  Conveniently?  :dry:

Instead of posting in human readable form they post them in machine readable form instead.  Then the general public must have a device that will interpret QR codes.  That was probably the conditions that the hospitals demanded imho.  I.e. that the hospitals be allow to obfuscate the prices in some why to make it more difficult to read.  Also, I'll believe it when I see private hospitals complying.  

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On Another incident, with admission, the nurse requested a N95 mask. It came on our bill as 500 baht!  That was crazy, and couldn’t get that one challenged.

 

this is how much these hospitals ripoff on the medicine and equipment.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Years ago,before I became wise to their methods,contracted pneumonia,now I did seek gps help,to no avail,went to govt hospital eventually who shipped me to private,there for close on 36 hours. I knew what they were up to from the start,exchanging half empty oxygen bottles for full ones,no doctor visits,discharged my self,ripped the damned pads off my chest and told them I want to see director of hospital,got 50% off bill they wanted to hit me with,  God they are foul

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.










×
×
  • Create New...