Fortean1 Posted September 12, 2024 Posted September 12, 2024 On 9 September we went to the Eye Clinic. My wife will have cataracts removed from her left eye on the 23rd. We were directed to the Information Desk near the main entrance. We were told we could not reserve a special (private) room at that time. Comments are welcome on those who have secured a special (private) room. No family in the area and I will provide 24/7 care for two days. I/we do not want to be placed in a general purpose ward. Terry ( a few miles south of Hua Hin )
Popular Post ukrules Posted September 12, 2024 Popular Post Posted September 12, 2024 I don't know about a private room but I can tell you that my mother had cataracts removed and didn't require a hospital stay at all. I believe that is the norm for cataracts, it is an 'outpatient' procedure. 1 5 1
Fortean1 Posted September 13, 2024 Author Posted September 13, 2024 Agreed. This is not true for my wife in this point in time. Curious indeed. My wife went to a private clinic in Bangkok for her right eye. 20,000 baht and outpatient without the need for Xray, blood test, and EKG and all the jerking around at the Eye Clinic at Hua Hin Hospital. New management? 6,000 baht + 2 days in a hospital. It is beyond irritating. 1
Popular Post Will B Good Posted September 13, 2024 Popular Post Posted September 13, 2024 I was allocated the VIP suite in our local hospital. It was a private room with a bed, squat toilet and a hand basin that was hanging of the wall and covered in ants. The walls were covered in patches of blood, which I hoped were ex-mosquitos!...Oh and it had one chair. Three nights, four litres of saline drip, antibiotics, essential salts....£60. 2 1
Popular Post brewsterbudgen Posted September 13, 2024 Popular Post Posted September 13, 2024 10 minutes ago, Will B Good said: I was allocated the VIP suite in our local hospital. It was a private room with a bed, squat toilet and a hand basin that was hanging of the wall and covered in ants. The walls were covered in patches of blood, which I hoped were ex-mosquitos!...Oh and it had one chair. Three nights, four litres of saline drip, antibiotics, essential salts....£60. Lesson learned? Stick to 'international/private' hospitals in Thailand! 1 2
Tropicalevo Posted September 13, 2024 Posted September 13, 2024 12 minutes ago, Fortean1 said: New management? 6,000 baht + 2 days in a hospital. It is beyond irritating. It is weird all of the different tales from the different hospitals. I paid top $ to have new lenses because of cataracts. Left eye day 1, right eye day 2. No stay in the hospital. Procedure in the mornings, working on the laptop at the hotel in the afternoons. Your two day stay is possibly a money grab. Are you supposed to 'bid' for the private room? I had similar when I went for a colonoscopy. Three day stay in the hospital. (But it was a very nice room.) Private rooms at the government hospital here on Samui - as rare as rocking horse schitt. Private rooms in the six private hospitals - no problem. 1
Popular Post Will B Good Posted September 13, 2024 Popular Post Posted September 13, 2024 3 minutes ago, brewsterbudgen said: Lesson learned? Stick to 'international/private' hospitals in Thailand! Definitely....although the nearest is a 90 minute drive.....but if I can make there I will..... next time....555 1 2
howerde Posted September 13, 2024 Posted September 13, 2024 I was told there was a problem with nurse shortages, apparently if you want a private room, a nurse is mandatory, and there is a shortage of them. but this was in Bangkok 1 1
Popular Post Fortean1 Posted September 13, 2024 Author Popular Post Posted September 13, 2024 5 hours ago, Tropicalevo said: It is weird all of the different tales from the different hospitals. I paid top $ to have new lenses because of cataracts. Left eye day 1, right eye day 2. No stay in the hospital. Procedure in the mornings, working on the laptop at the hotel in the afternoons. Your two day stay is possibly a money grab. Are you supposed to 'bid' for the private room? I had similar when I went for a colonoscopy. Three day stay in the hospital. (But it was a very nice room.) Private rooms at the government hospital here on Samui - as rare as rocking horse schitt. Private rooms in the six private hospitals - no problem. Yes, bidding and a lottery of sorts. Definitely a money grab. Lessons learned, do not do this again. We went to the emergency room at Bangkok Hospital in Hua Hin when my wife had a stroke in March 2017. ICU overnight and then ambulance to Bangkok Hospital in Bangkok. Stabilized and the right carotid artery replaced using left leg vein. A few million baht but TRICARE, the U.S. military HMO, covered 65% to 70% the first $3,000, then 100% of the remainder. Excellent care and primary doctor worked in the U.S. for several decades. 1 1 1
Tropicalevo Posted September 13, 2024 Posted September 13, 2024 5 hours ago, howerde said: I was told there was a problem with nurse shortages, apparently if you want a private room, a nurse is mandatory, and there is a shortage of them. but this was in Bangkok At the government hospital here on Samui, I tried to get a private room for a friend. She had tuberculosis. Luckily, none available. If we got one, I would have had to stay in the room with her 24/7. Same thing, no nurses. 1
Fortean1 Posted September 13, 2024 Author Posted September 13, 2024 7 hours ago, Tropicalevo said: At the government hospital here on Samui, I tried to get a private room for a friend. She had tuberculosis. Luckily, none available. If we got one, I would have had to stay in the room with her 24/7. Same thing, no nurses. My wife's family is in Bangkok and the Ayutthaya area. I'm going to try and ask the staff head nurse on the 23rd that I am the only family. Staying 24/7 for the better part of two days will be difficult for us. My wife is 78. I am 75. No one mentioned nurses to us but as we know hospitals differ a bit here.
ChaiyaTH Posted September 14, 2024 Posted September 14, 2024 Why would you need to be inpatient for that, you could just stay at a hotel. Those procedures take like 30-45 minutes. Sounds like a money grab if they want her to stay for 2 nights, knowing upfront that she would need basically zero care too.
ChaiyaTH Posted September 14, 2024 Posted September 14, 2024 On 9/13/2024 at 8:57 AM, Will B Good said: I was allocated the VIP suite in our local hospital. It was a private room with a bed, squat toilet and a hand basin that was hanging of the wall and covered in ants. The walls were covered in patches of blood, which I hoped were ex-mosquitos!...Oh and it had one chair. Three nights, four litres of saline drip, antibiotics, essential salts....£60. Sounds like a nightmare, in CM I was paying for a decent room around 1.5K baht a night in the hospital. 1
Popular Post Will B Good Posted September 14, 2024 Popular Post Posted September 14, 2024 Just now, ChaiyaTH said: Sounds like a nightmare, in CM I was paying for a decent room around 1.5K baht a night in the hospital. It was made infinitely worse by a guy in the general ward who was in agony......stomach cancer apparently....who screamed constantly.....'I don't want to die' (in Isaan of course). What was nice was the constant interest paid to be by little Thai faces peering through the little window in the door to my room and the large number of hospital staff who waved me off when I left.....555 1 2
Popular Post ChaiyaTH Posted September 14, 2024 Popular Post Posted September 14, 2024 1 minute ago, Will B Good said: It was made infinitely worse by a guy in the general ward who was in agony......stomach cancer apparently....who screamed constantly.....'I don't want to die' (in Isaan of course). What was nice was the constant interest paid to be by little Thai faces peering through the little window in the door to my room and the large number of hospital staff who waved me off when I left.....555 The king of isaan is leaving, i can see them all lined up while you roll out in a wheelchair. 1 1 1
Will B Good Posted September 14, 2024 Posted September 14, 2024 Just now, ChaiyaTH said: The king of isaan is leaving, i can see them all lined up while you roll out in a wheelchair. 555...Got to admit it was totally unexpected, but very heartwarming. 1 1
Fortean1 Posted September 14, 2024 Author Posted September 14, 2024 5 hours ago, ChaiyaTH said: Why would you need to be inpatient for that, you could just stay at a hotel. Those procedures take like 30-45 minutes. Sounds like a money grab if they want her to stay for 2 nights, knowing upfront that she would need basically zero care too. Yes, a money grab. My wife went to a private clinic in Bangkok a few years ago to remove cataracts from her right eye. 20,000 baht, no fuss and no muss, none of the paperwork drill, short visit, and returned in two hours to my sister-in-law's house in Lat Phrao. Irritating on the 9th as Eye Clinic directed us to the X-ray lab and blood collection to read the x-ray CD and blood pressure (?), both goat ropes, and finally given a number and four or five more things to do in the Eye Clinic, about six hours and then back home.
ukrules Posted September 14, 2024 Posted September 14, 2024 On 9/12/2024 at 9:41 PM, Fortean1 said: We were told we could not reserve a special (private) room at that time. Could this be a miscommunication of some kind? As in you can't reserve a private room, because its not needed - so they just said no room for you? Anyway I wouldn't sweat it - once the procedure is done, check out of the place, pay the bill and go home. 1
Fortean1 Posted September 14, 2024 Author Posted September 14, 2024 My wife is Thai. She understood no reservation although three price levels were given. Yes, but check in is Monday, the 23rd, and procedure the following morning. Next week 2nd trip to my wife's hospital, Pran Buri Hospital, to get the permission paper for Hua Hin Hospital to perform the procedure. The previous one had expired. We shall hopefully see what is in store on the 23rd. I've learned the map is not the territory as we were instructed in the Army. LOL 1
The Fugitive Posted September 19, 2024 Posted September 19, 2024 Thai Mrs had tumours cut out of her leg at Khon Kaen Regional Hospital. She was covered by the 30 baht scheme but decided she wanted a private room. It was basic but adequate and very clean. Cost 1,000 baht per day. Her daughter stayed with her to provide personal care and fetch noodles. The surgery was performed under local anaesthetic by the tumour doctor who runs the hospital clinic. Most satisfactory.
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