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dying from cancer at home in Thailand


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Posted
8 minutes ago, PoorSucker said:

My father in-law got a hospital bed at home and nurse came every week.

Small village in north Chiang Mai.

Died from stomach cancer

But he preferred the ganja tea I made for him.

Posted
10 hours ago, Lorry said:

My experience how ordinary Thais die is pretty similar to what @connda wrote.

They die in agony. All they get is paracetamol tablets.

 

That's my experience how they die in the West too. My grandmother just died aged 94. The hospital divesteritself off of her, and just sent her home, as my mother was willing to take care of her and give her morphine. It was still a horrendous death in agony according to my mother's eye witness account.

 

Even with fantastic health insurance and additional money hospitals eventually give up on those who cannot be saved.

  • Agree 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, Sheryl said:

Morphine or similar is necessary

How about Codein, got it my pharmacy here in Pattaya for my shingles I suffering from right now.

Posted
5 minutes ago, connda said:

can't say I've ever come across a pharmacy selling Codeine. I get them from a doctor, i.e., I have a prescription.  Use them on rare occasions for sleep. 

My pharmacy here in Pattaya, Xanax, Valium, Codeine, Tramadol... No problem

Xanax is better for sleep

 

I have social security in Thailand, so free if I go to the doctor.

Posted
1 hour ago, connda said:


Substandard (by Western standards) palliative care readily available in most parts of Thailand.  It's still in the stone-ages and is hampered by Thai elites/leaders aversion to drugs that are effective by using the excuse that those drugs "might be abused" so therefore they must be made difficult to obtain, for example, that's why you can't have morphine drips in a home setting.  You might "abuse" your morphine while your dying.  Heaven forbid.

The poster was asking for a recommendation as to whether or not he should return to his home in Thailand. If he is able to pay for whatever treatment/medication he needs I would say he should return

to Thailand.  BTW morphine is available for home use, at a price.

Posted
1 minute ago, Thingamabob said:

 BTW morphine is available for home use, at a price.

My late FIL liked the ganja tea I made for his stomach cancer

Posted
54 minutes ago, PoorSucker said:

How about Codein, got it my pharmacy here in Pattaya for my shingles I suffering from right now.

Codeine (which comes only in oral form) would also not be enough for advanced cancer pain.  At that stage one needs morphine or related drugs like fentanyl.

 

Are you sure you got codeine from a pharmacy? It is a schedule 2 narcotic in Thailand and sale allowed only from hospitals and clinics.

Posted
14 minutes ago, Thingamabob said:

The poster was asking for a recommendation as to whether or not he should return to his home in Thailand. If he is able to pay for whatever treatment/medication he needs I would say he should return

to Thailand.  BTW morphine is available for home use, at a price.

Oral morphine is certainly available and not necessarily expensive. Even government hospitals will prescribe it for home use in terminal situations (though not necessarily in enough dose and quantity).

 

I have never seen or heard of IV morphine drips in the home (and I know wealthy people who certainly tried). If you do, please share the details. By PM if not here.

  • Agree 1
Posted
59 minutes ago, PoorSucker said:

My pharmacy here in Pattaya, Xanax, Valium, Codeine, Tramadol... No problem

Xanax is better for sleep

 

I have social security in Thailand, so free if I go to the doctor.

Your pharmacy is breaking the law, big time.  (not for the tramadol. But for the rest). And so are you, in buying these over the counter.

 

What does Social Security have to do with buying meds from a private pharmacy?

Posted
18 minutes ago, Thingamabob said:

The poster was asking for a recommendation as to whether or not he should return to his home in Thailand. If he is able to pay for whatever treatment/medication he needs I would say he should return

to Thailand. 

 

I would not necessarily agree, there are other considerations, as I outlined. Money is essential but not sufficient.

 

He will not remain in a condition able to direct his care and supervise paid attendants. 

 

Someone else has to be willing and able to do that, if he is set against going into a private facility even in the last stages.

  • Agree 1
Posted
1 hour ago, PoorSucker said:

https://www.koonhospital.com/ seems to have palliative care in Pathum Thai

Yes, I discussed and linked to this in my first post.

 

Looks quite good but I have no first hand feedback.

 

However OP needs to clarify if he would accept this at some stage since his original post specified dying at home.  That, much harder to manage as things progress, and needs a capable person to manage it.

 

Besides Koon, as I previously said, St Louis has a wing for palliative care and I have had good feedback on it.  https://www.saintlouis.or.th/clinics/palliative-care-center/40

Posted

very sad topic indeed,   I am sorry for the OP and his cancer,  it's a horrible disease and you think with all the great doctors and billions of dollars spent on it that a cure would have been found. 

 

I hope you find peace and harmony fvw....    god be with you.. :drunk:

  • Agree 1
Posted
5 hours ago, Drumbuie said:

 

No hospices? Not true. Here's one :-  https://qscbc.org/en/qscbc-foundation/

 

 

This is not a hospice.

 

It is a  center for diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer.

 

There are some (few) hospices in the Western sense here, as I previously described. But not many.

 

There are also foundations/temples that provide very basic, unskilled custodial care to homeless people with terminal illnesses. But I would nto really call that "hospice" in the palliative sense.

 

 

Posted
19 hours ago, connda said:

Not at home they didn't.  You don't have to believe me.  Wait for Sheryl to check in.  The locals here who die of cancer and are in extreme pain will be send from our Amphur hospital to a provincial government hospital, in this case Lamphun Government Hospital were they'll be administered enough morphine to keep them out of extreme agony - but not to keep them comfortable.  I've seen the conditions average Thais die in here in Thailand and it's not pretty or dignified.

My GF's mom just died 3 days ago of cancer from a lump in her neck area. She was given Morphine pills to take home. They operated 5 months ago and was followed up with Radiation. She was operated on in Korat so not a small town hospital. I'd bet she would still be alive and much better off if she didnt have the procedures. She died at home with an infected hole in her neck living her last few weeks suffering with the doctors saying there's nothing they can do. It was heart wrenching. Very ugly and far from dignified. A horrific eye opener for me I wouldn't wish on my enemy.

  • Heart-broken 2
Posted
24 minutes ago, Sheryl said:

 

I would not necessarily agree, there are other considerations, as I outlined. Money is essential but not sufficient.

 

He will not remain in a condition able to direct his care and supervise paid attendants. 

 

Someone else has to be willing and able to do that, if he is set against going into a private facility even in the last stages.

You make an important point. So much depends on personal circumstances when facing a terminal illness. I should have added a lot will depend on the ability/willingness of those around him in Thailand to take full responsibility for his well- being if and when he becomes unable to do so himself. 

  • Agree 1
  • Thanks 1
Posted
2 hours ago, connda said:

You might "abuse" your morphine while your dying. 

Your relatives might sell it.

Why waste something on dying grandma, if you could sell it on the black market?

  • Thumbs Down 1
Posted
3 hours ago, ChipButty said:

but all of a sudden he died one morning

hmm ....seems a bit strange,   and she was obviously there at the time.   foul play perhaps .. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Sheryl said:

Your pharmacy is breaking the law, big time.  (not for the tramadol. But for the rest). And so are you, in buying these over the counter.

 

What does Social Security have to do with buying meds from a private pharmacy?

Yes, breaking the law.

Know it.

Social security card gives it for free, but have to wait 3h to see doctor, I work.

Paying 600 baht is worth it at this pharmacy.

I make 5000-7000 baht per day, so waiting 3h costs ,I only work 6h/Day

 

My pharmaceutical is is Katoy, kicked out from med school

Posted
22 hours ago, fvw53 said:

I am 82 years old and I live in Thailand since 1987.

Last year during holidays in my home country (EU) a bladder cancer was detected. Since then I have undergone TURBT, cistectomy, radiotherapy but the cancer always came back and now as a last option immunotherapy will be tried.

If this does not work I would prefer to be no longer a burden for the friends where I am now staying and return to Thailand to dy in my own house.

However I do not know if in Thailand there is palliative care at home 

What do Forum members recommend?

 

Yes there is ranging from your personal home help to the large nursing home which provides full medical services.  It's about 70 K Thai baht a month

Posted
4 hours ago, Sheryl said:

our pharmacy is breaking the law, big time.  (not for the tramadol. But for the rest). And so are you, in buying these over the counter.

I told him the same thing.  Get caught, it's jail time.  You need a valid prescription from a doctor.  There have been enough stories on AN about foreigners getting busted for possession of tranquilizers like Xanax. It's a trip to a clinic to stay legal.

Posted
On 5/16/2025 at 11:59 AM, PoorSucker said:

But where do you live?

There was a post today with a palliative nurse that worked in Europe for 10 years, looking for work (not her but husband)

 

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