Funkymover Posted Friday at 09:10 PM Posted Friday at 09:10 PM Has anyone been diagnosed with chronic kidney disease, if so how do you deal with it in thailand and how did it affect any health insurance,
Sheryl Posted Saturday at 05:59 AM Posted Saturday at 05:59 AM If you truly have chronic kidney disease to a significant extent, it will preclude getting health insurance if you are not already insured. But what extent of "chronic kidney disease" are you talking about? What stage, what creatnine level?. Many people get misdiagnosed here based on unreliable eGFR calculations/ unreliable self-diagnosis. Management of chronic kidney disease varies greatly depending in stage, and any underlying cause (diabetes, hypertension. lupus etc).
Funkymover Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago I am not in thailand yet, was planning to retire next year,, I have just been told I have mild chronic kidney disease.. so looks like this has thrown out the window my plans to retire overseas 1
Sheryl Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago 51 minutes ago, Funkymover said: I am not in thailand yet, was planning to retire next year,, I have just been told I have mild chronic kidney disease.. so looks like this has thrown out the window my plans to retire overseas I would certainly not advice living fulltime in Thailand with this unless you are very, very wealthy with plenty of cash to self fund medical costs (which if your kidney disease progresses, may be extreme;y high here). You could consider spending up to 6 months of each year here while maintaining a base in your home country, in that scenario would need only travel insurance and there are some policies which will cover "acute exacerbations" of chronic conditions. This also has some tax advantages i.e. if you keep it below 180 days you would not be tax resident in Thailand.
connda Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago CKD is staged. My guess is that most people in their 70s or older have CKD in one form or another. So the important question here is: What stage of CKD do you have. Then you can begin to have a discussion. 1
Sandboxer Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago Not medical advice, just MY personal experience: CKD can be somewhat reversible IF you have hard core discipline. I (age 52) went from being diagnosed stage 3.....3.5 back to stage 2 lab levels within 6 months of starting a complete and extreme lifestyle change (stopped smoking/drinking, eat kidney healthy food only, exercise a lot, weight control etc.) Saw a total of three nephrologists at "top tier" private hospitals in BKK, Phuket and Korat, none of whom had very good communication skills. In the end, I educated myself. IMO, do NOT rely solely on doctors and assembly line insurance mill private hospitals here that seem to have zero interest in a proper patient/doctor relationship. Having said that, I could not have done it without the help of my dietician. Hardest/longest part was getting the massive amounts of protein out of my urine. Feel like I did as a 30 yr old now, so the CKD was ironically/arguably the "best" thing that's happened to me. Best of luck.
Sheryl Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 16 hours ago, connda said: CKD is staged. My guess is that most people in their 70s or older have CKD in one form or another. So the important question here is: What stage of CKD do you have. Then you can begin to have a discussion. EFGR is not the only basis for diagnosing CKD. eFGRs as low as 60 can still be considered normal if there ate no other signs of kidney disease. However sounds like OP was diagnosed in his home county so presumably proper workup was conducted leading to his diagnosis.
Funkymover Posted 10 hours ago Author Posted 10 hours ago 9 hours ago, connda said: CKD is staged. My guess is that most people in their 70s or older have CKD in one form or another. So the important question here is: What stage of CKD do you have. Then you can begin to have a discussion. 9 hours ago, connda said: CKD is staged. My guess is that most people in their 70s or older have CKD in one form or another. So the important question here is: What stage of CKD do you have. Then you can begin to have a discussion. I have been told my kidneys are working at 69% , took them 6 months of me hassling them to get the scan, also found a large cyst on it, but they say that's no problem and they are leaving it there.
jerrymahoney Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago What to Know About Stage 3 Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) Can stage 3 kidney disease be reversed? The goal of CKD stage 3 treatment is to prevent further progression. There’s no cure for any stage of CKD, and you can’t reverse kidney damage. However, further damage can still be minimized if you’re at stage 3. It’s more difficult to prevent progression in stages 4 and 5. https://www.healthline.com/health/stage-3-kidney-disease#reversal
bkk6060 Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Did you have a UACR? I bet the many over 70 year Olds here have mild CKD. Google says 35 million adults in the U.S. have CKD, many don't even realize it. I would not let it change plans to come to Thailand. Just try to stay healthy with diet, exercise, little or no booze and get frequent tests. If it progresses, a person can return to their home country. As far as insurance, for sure it will affect it here. Most likely no coverage for any current or future issues. If in fact, they give you a policy at all.
Sheryl Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 7 hours ago, Funkymover said: I have been told my kidneys are working at 69% , took them 6 months of me hassling them to get the scan, also found a large cyst on it, but they say that's no problem and they are leaving it there. If that is a GFR if 69%, it equates to kidney disease only if there are other indications of kidney damage. Presumably there are e.g. albumin in urine, abnormal urine albumin:creatnine ratio etc. Kidney cysts are a common incidental finding and usually need no treatment. What else did the scan show? Assuming it is accompanied by other signs of kidney damage, an eGFR of 69% equates to Stage 2 chronic kidney disease https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/kidney-disease/diagnosis/ https://www.kidney.org/what-criteria-ckd
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