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Coligny wrote:Once again... you want good doctors... go to Korea...
Bucky wrote:Canman, I think the emergency docs are sometimes not the best. I remember going into St. Lukes Hospital (Tsukiji) one night with a horrible cold. The guy gave me some meds that made me sweat like I was in a sauna. I guess he thought that'd fix me. I went back the next day and the specialist I saw diagnosed pneumonia and put me on antibiotics.
canman wrote:Are you being facetious or not? I've never heard anything about Korean doctors. But I have heard of Thai and Indian hospitals being very good, with many western trained mds.
Coligny wrote:For the bad Japanese:
Every fracking day at dinertime... There's now even a new categoy of screw ups that she avoid talking aboot with her father to avoid having him go ballistic on the ass of the hospital director. (dad is former doctor in charge of investigation for malpractice in liaison with them cops)
Behan wrote:One thing that struck me about doctors here is that so many seem to own their own, independent clinics or hospitals. If they made a mistake no other doctors might notice it. Back in the US, many GPs (=naika?) work in or have small clinics but they also spend time in larger hospitals where the quality of their work is likely to be noticed.
But at least many or most Japanese people can afford health care, unlike tens of millions of Amerians.
AssKissinger wrote:I received much better health care in Japan and Korea than in the United States which I believe has the worst health care in the world including Africa. It was amazing for me when I first went to the doctor overseas and enjoyed competent health care providers instead of just insanely overpriced, inaccessible quackery. For example, in America, they expect you to spend the night hooked up to a machine before they'll give you an overpriced sleeping pill that they spend hundreds of millions of dollars advertising for on TV. If I had gone through some of the same shit in America that I went through in Japan I would be dead.
Yokohammer wrote:... until one saves your life.
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:I have nothing but praise for the medical care I've received in Japan. GPs, surgeons, specialists, nurses, everyone has been brilliant.
canman wrote:I had knee surgery that went very well, no complaints, the stay was perhaps a bit long, but good none-the-less. I do have a horror story about a young doctor trying to put a stupid IV line into me before the operation, and almost killing me. He couldn't find the vein, and thought that the best way was just to force it in a push as hard as he could. He kept making this comment, " Canadian veins are hard, haha". My blood pressure dropped and I thought I was going to faint. This nurse walked over and boom, it was in without even a pinch.
canman wrote:This nurse walked over and boom, it was in without even a pinch.
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:I've known a few nurses like that, too. I've usually ended up pinching them a couple of times, though...
FG Lurker wrote:I knew one nurse like that -- real screamer too.
unkosando wrote:Japanese doctors are pussies. Everytime I needed an antibiotic my doctor would prescribe the weakest dose possible. I would have to go back to him after a week and tell him I was still sick. Finally, he would give the proper dosage and the burning sensation would go away.
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