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Bangkok Hospital in Bt-6 bn expansion


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Bangkok Hospital in Bt-6 bn expansion
SUCHAT SRITAMA
THE NATION

BANGKOK: -- BANGKOK HOSPITAL Group is expanding its medical facilities at a cost of Bt6 billion over the next two years in order to cope with rising healthcare demand from overseas markets.

Prasert Prasarttong-Osoth, group chief executive officer and president of Bangkok Dusit Medical Services - the listed parent company - yesterday said the group would start construction of the first two new hospital buildings this year, with completion expected in 2016.

Located next to Bangkok Hospital on New Phetchaburi Road, one of the two new buildings on the plot will be dedicated to serving patients from Myanmar, while the other one will be specific to the Middle Eastern market.

Each of the two new hospitals will operate 50 beds, and the joint investment cost is Bt2 billion.

"Once the new hospitals are opened, Myanmar and Arab patients will be housed separately from other nationalities in order to offer a more efficient service," said Prasert.

The group will also build another four buildings on the plot, for a combined outlay of Bt4 billion. This part of the development is also expected to be completed by the end of 2016.

The four buildings will comprise a total of 200 beds, and all facilities will be upgraded to the American-standard level in order to serve global markets, said the CEO. "This part of the expansion will help increase our position as a real international-standard hospital - American-service standard - and for the treatment of special deceases," he added. The group earlier signed contracts with hospitals in the US for further cooperation and the exchange of specialist doctors.

Aside from the new facilities, the group will enhance its Bangkok Health Research Centre to pave the way for building its international reputation and presence. Prasert said 25 per cent of the group's 870,000 patients last year were foreigners. This is expected to rise to 30 per cent next year, and to 40 per cent in 2016 when the new facilities are completed.

The expansion also aims to capture more of the Asean market, with a target of 500,000 patients from the region in 2015-2016.

Last year, 2.3 million foreigners visited Thailand for medical treatment, while Singapore received 850,000 medical visitors, Malaysia welcomed 700,000 and the Philippines had 81,000.

While the cost of treatment in Thailand is two times lower than in Singapore, it is more expensive than in Malaysia and the Philippines - as well as in India. Bumrungrad Hospital and Bangkok Hospital were earlier ranked sixth and eighth respectively in terms of the best global hospitals for tourists.

With this good image and reputation, Bangkok Hospital Group is now entering non-core businesses, including medicine and food-supplement products, as these can generate a profit margin of up to 18 per cent compared to 11 per cent from core products, said the chief executive.

Bangkok Hospital Group is the largest hospital network in Thailand and Southeast Asia. It operates 6,100 beds in the Kingdom and Cambodia under six brands: Bangkok Hospital, Samitivej, BNH, Phyathai, Paolo Memorial and Royal.

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/business/Bangkok-Hospital-in-Bt-6-bn-expansion-30243514.html

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-- The Nation 2014-09-18

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Bangkok Hospital, the home of the greed. Just go there if you need i.e. Acetylcysteine for 20 Baht for your daughter during the night. They will offer you the pick up of your daughter and every treatment in the hospital, but they will never sell you any medication, no matter how much money you have spent at this Hospital already, during the last years. Plutus is the father of their ethical code.

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The have just opened a big new hospital up here in Chiang Mai.

regards Worgeordie

And just bought the Phuket International whilst building yet another 'Bangkok Hospital Lite' yeah, on the island, thus now have total control of every private hospital facility on the island dry.png

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"patients from Myanmar"

so they must mean a low budget hospital or only for the rich drug dealers & military from that country ?

nice to see thailand is focussing on medicine for the rich overseas and the pitty service and quiet overpriced for the natives and expats

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'... Bangkok Hospital Group is now entering non-core businesses, including medicine and food-supplement products, as these can generate a profit margin of up to 18 per cent compared to 11 per cent from core products ...' Are they referring to wholeselling of medicines? Because at least one of the group's brands already does flog overpriced medicines, at up to twice the going rate in a high street pharmacy. I should have thought they all did. Perhaps they would generate more profit by actually reducing the prices, thus increasing product turnover.

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Actually the latest research I've seen says that Thai official figures exaggerate the numbers of genuine medical tourists, because they add in regular tourists who fall ill and expats (who are quite a big market segment). The other point is that most of the leading international hospitals treat more Thai than foreign patients (even including expats).

http://ihppthaigov.net/ith/docs/ss4/ITHC4-2_medical%20tourists_DrThinakorn.pdf

There is more detail in Thinakorn Noree's Ph.D. thesis, which also contains interesting data on dual pricing.

So I am surprised if the expansion is really on the back of growing numbers of medical tourists as usually defined, It may also reflect the growing numbers of Thais who pay for private hospital services.

Edited by citizen33
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Actually the latest research I've seen says that Thai official figures exaggerate the numbers of genuine medical tourists, because they add in regular tourists who fall ill and expats (who are quite a big market segment). The other point is that most of the leading international hospitals treat more Thai than foreign patients (even including expats).

http://ihppthaigov.net/ith/docs/ss4/ITHC4-2_medical%20tourists_DrThinakorn.pdf

There is more detail in Thinakorn Noree's Ph.D. thesis, which also contains interesting data on dual pricing.

So I am surprised if the expansion is really on the back of growing numbers of medical tourists as usually defined, It may also reflect the growing numbers of Thais who pay for private hospital services.

I go to bumrumgrad hospital just for their McDonalds, just eating there makes me feel healthier.

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I go to bumrumgrad hospital just for their McDonalds, just eating there makes me feel healthier.

As I recall that is the only one of the leading international hospitals in Noree's study that had more foreign than Thai patients.

Edited by citizen33
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