I had a very bad experience with a Khmer doctor at Rattanak (Dr. Som - avoid at all costs.) His English was dreadful enough to seriously impede communication, and even to someone with my limited medical knowledge, his initial diagnosis was laughable (the hospital in Bangkok to which I eventually fled could not believe he had been so far off the mark, given the symptoms). He also tried to con me into agreeing to a battery of expensive and unnecessary tests (to support his quack diagnosis), obviously in an attempt to pad the bill. $75, and no closer to a solution to my condition than when I walked in.Spad wrote:Come on guys - you can see a well qualified Cambodian or Thai doctor at Rattanak hospital for $15-20 dollar fee - the only trouble is that you have to pay for everything else used or thought about, and the fees for drugs etc are high so you always end up paying $50 or so in total. When I say well qualified, the surgeon I saw last time there had 30 years experience in Florida after completing specialisation. At least they post pics of all their doctors on the wall with their CVs underneath so you can see where they studied and what jobs they have had since graduation. This is something I would like to see in the west in waiting rooms. The standards for equipment etc are first class
Khmer Dr's & Western Dr's!
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Well guys , you now have the new hospital Hun Sin has had built . my SIL was in there a short time ago for a breast lump that had been previosly butchered and returned to haunt her . She was given excellent treatment by a Barang doctor who gave her ultrasound and 'Touchy-feely' testing , found several more nodules the others had missed , gave her medication to desolve the lumps within 3 weeks or return for treatment . The cost was $20.00 for the ultrasound , no charge for her services , told her to buy medication outside on her prescription , cost $16.00 . My wifes comment that the hospital is "Fantastic ".
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What is the name of the hospital and where is it?mango45 wrote:Well guys , you now have the new hospital Iron Sin has had built . my SIL was in there a short time ago for a breast lump that had been previosly butchered and returned to haunt her . She was given excellent treatment by a Barang doctor who gave her ultrasound and 'Touchy-feely' testing , found several more nodules the others had missed , gave her medication to desolve the lumps within 3 weeks or return for treatment . The cost was $20.00 for the ultrasound , no charge for her services , told her to buy medication outside on her prescription , cost $16.00 . My wifes comment that the hospital is "Fantastic ".
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Well , I have the card from the Hun Sin Hospital now .
Sen Sok International University Hospital . No street address
e-mail : [email protected]
Website : www.sensokiuh.com
Dr Tatiana Turobova , MD with honors
Best Oncologist 2008/2009
Best Doctor 2010
Hope this helps somebody , mango45 .
Sen Sok International University Hospital . No street address
e-mail : [email protected]
Website : www.sensokiuh.com
Dr Tatiana Turobova , MD with honors
Best Oncologist 2008/2009
Best Doctor 2010
Hope this helps somebody , mango45 .
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Chenda Polyclinic near Wat Phnom is an excellent place to go. A few years ago my wife needed abdominal surgery. She came out with a three inch scar not one of those hip to hip types. I was in a nasty moto accident 2 years ago. I had a broken collar bone and fractured ribs spent 3 days there. Had multiple x rays and tests and copious amounts of painkillers had an air conditioned private room with TV the total bill was $315.00. Quality of care is one of the best in PP I believe and reasonable prices.
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Not asking about any specific doctors, just if there is actually a law saying that hospitals need to hire 10 Khmer doctors for ever 1 foreign doctor.vladimir wrote:Khmer doctors? Witch specific doctors are you asking about?
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Never heard of it. Anyway, less of the griping about poor medical facilities, the Japs are coming...giblet wrote:Not asking about any specific doctors, just if there is actually a law saying that hospitals need to hire 10 Khmer doctors for ever 1 foreign doctor.vladimir wrote:Khmer doctors? Witch specific doctors are you asking about?
Japan to export hospitals to Russia, China, Vietnam, Cambodia
The government and the private sector will jointly "export hospitals" to Russia, China, Vietnam and Cambodia as part of Japan's efforts to make its medical services a key pillar of economic growth.
The idea is to spread the positive reputation of Japanese medical services abroad to encourage more high-income foreigners to visit Japan for treatment.
Under the project, a first for Japan, Japanese doctors and nurses will be dispatched abroad starting in autumn, along with medical equipment provided by Japanese manufacturers, such as Terumo Corp., Toshiba Medical Systems Corp. and Panasonic Corp.
The government will use 350 million yen (about $4.4 million) earmarked by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry in a fiscal 2010 supplementary budget for internationalization of medical services.
However, the Japan Medical Association (JMA), the largest domestic doctors' organization, said internationalization of medical services will expand markets not covered by public health insurance programs, which will pose a threat to insurance programs that enable patients to receive medical services at low costs.
"There is a possibility that hospitals will put priority on seeking benefits and, as a result, hinder medical services in local communities," a JMA official said.
Medical fees paid from public health insurance programs constitute the main source of income of hospitals in Japan.
Japanese public health insurance programs do not cover fees for medical tourism to Japan.
Six programs have been chosen for feasibility studies in the hospital export plan.
In one program, Southern Tohoku General Hospital in Fukushima Prefecture and other organizations will open a high-level medical service center in a private hospital in Moscow. The center will specialize in treatments using endoscopes.
In Vladivostok in Russia's Far East, Hokuto Hospital in Hokkaido and other institutions will open a radiography center equipped with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) devices.
The University of Tokyo Hospital and other organizations will open a medical institution in Shanghai that specializes in diabetes. The number of patients suffering from lifestyle-related diseases is increasing amid China's economic development.
In Beijing, Asada General Hospital in Kagawa Prefecture and other institutions will offer high-level health checks and create a database for patient information.
In Cambodia, Kitahara International Hospital in Tokyo will offer emergency medical services and rehabilitation programs in a local hospital, and build the country's first emergency medical center in fiscal 2012.
The Japanese government in June last year decided to make medical, nursing and health-related services new growth industries.
The government plans to produce 1 trillion yen in economic effects and create 50,000 jobs through exports of hospitals and medical tourism by 2020.
http://www.asahi.com/english/TKY201107130342.html
Who Gives a Fuck?
*sighWhich doctor or witch doctor Vladimir?
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Something like private clinics/hospitals have to be owned by a Cambodian citizen, you can find one foreign born doctor who has a Cambodian passport in PP. As for 1 to 10 law I don't know but get your prostate checked out and you can get further details.giblet wrote:I heard from a doctor that Cambodia has some sort of law that hospitals that staff foreign doctors need to also staff Khmer doctors, at a 1 to 10 ratio. Anyone know if this is true?
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