Aussies a drain on Phuket hospitals

Oh well we spend all our money there,keep them fed housed and clothed by our prescence,they sell us drinks made of wood alcohol,then complain when you get sick and use the public hospital to stop yourself dying!

Geez get real,you want the money dont ya,then when you poison us expect us to turn up at your hospital?

Heres the story.

Australian visitors - mostly males in their 30s and without health insurance -- are posing an increasing drain on public hospitals budgets on the Thai resort island of Phuket.

The island has become increasingly popular with not only tourists, but also retirees and long-term foreign residents lured by the lower cost of living.

But the Thai public hospital system is facing an increasing financial burden from the high expense of caring for ill, cash-strapped foreign visitors.

Dr Nara Kingkaew, deputy director of Vachira Public Hospital in Phuket, says Australians are among the leading foreign patients who seek medical care at public hospitals because they don't have insurance.

"It's a lot of problem because it's a great burden for us to look after the foreigners, especially the Westerners who come to Thailand without any health insurance and then they fall sick or are met with an accident," Dr Nara told AAP.

There are about 30,000 Australians on Phuket in any given month out of a total of about 900,000 Australian visitors to Thailand each year.

Other nationals include Russians, British and Germans.

Dr Nara noted an Australian man who fell from a Patong Beach Hotel spent several months in hospital recuperating from his injuries, including broken legs and hips, before being discharged. He was unable to pay the cost of his hospital stay, which amounted to about $A10,000.

Foreigners in accidents are initially taken to Phuket's private hospitals, but are often moved on to the public hospital when it is revealed they have no insurance or once their funds are exhausted.

Dr Nara said the hospital faces expenses each year of more than 4.0 million baht ($A140,000) caring for foreigners, not only as patients but also those who die and whose bodies are not claimed.

The hospital has to by law cremate or dispose of the body after 30 or 60 days after notifying the embassy if no relatives come forward.

Australian offenders are often males, aged 30 to 35 years, who had been drinking before having an accident, often from crashing rented motorbikes.

He also pointed to a significant percentage of foreign retirees who use the hospitals.

Larry Cunningham, Australia's honorary consul on Phuket, says the issue of foreigners as a burden on public hospitals was growing.

"It's just not fair. I mean the retirees are blocking up the hospital," Mr Cunningham told AAP.

"Every time you go to Vachira (Hospital), there's a (Western) guy sitting there, legs in plaster, their arms in a sling, bits off them everywhere, being wheeled out and they are blocking up the public health system," he said.

The Thai Health Ministry has called for all visitors to be required to pay for health insurance at immigration checkpoints or have the fee incorporated in their air ticket.

Dr Nara agrees. "That is a good thing for us because when they get insurance as they enter the kingdom, when they fall sick or they met with an accident, they will have someone to pay for them, otherwise the hospital has to spend a lot of money for the foreigners."

3 comments

Travel insurance is just common sense imo, don't know about the retirees, don't foreigners staying in Oz get looked after in our hospitals?

Sure they do but only for emergency care and someone has to pay either themselves, their travel  Insurance or Medicare will pick up the tab only if there is a reciprocal agreement with the country of origin for emergency care.

Retirees who have moved there should have Health nsurance to cover them, imo, otherwise they are just bludging off the host country.

Thats what i thought Maggs,if any visitor is ill then they go to any public hospital,that was the point of the thread,they dont mind Aussies spending money there but baulk at any medical help when they are sick,all visitors to any country work just as hard as the locals,but the pay rates are different,whats the problem? they want their cake and eat it too,if they advertise "come to Phuket" and spend,then they should provide care as well,we are all entitled to care,but they were saying put a levy on the plane ticket to cover health costs,I think Australia as a nation gives enough foreign aid,but they sort of put it elsewhere.

Billy anyone visiting any of these countries without travel insurance is not covered for health cover and would be expected to pay.

COUNTRIES AUSTRALIA DOESN'T HAVE RECIPROCAL HEALTH AGREEMENTS WITH

CanadaUnited StatesFijiIndonesiaThailandChinaSingaporeHong KongJapanGermany
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/the-countries-where-you-never-want-to-fall-ill/story-e6frfq7r-1226579463055#ixzz2bNcrVlCX

I never thought of Thailand as a major holiday place,just as a party place,I was always of the opinion that if you get sick or injured antywhere in the world they take you to hospital and look after you insurance or not.

Thats my take on it,but everyone should have some type of cover but in Thailand if you count the amount spent by tourists then some should be directed for healthcare of visitors who bring in the money,not everyone gets sick,only a few.

Just googled how many Aussies visited Thailand in 2012 it was 952,000,thats a lot of money,if they cant take 5 bucks off each visitor and spend it in the Hospital system then there is something wrong?

How much did each holiday maker spend? its not chickenfeed,and we give em $4.5 million towards schools and education,surely they cant moan about people getting ill there,or idiots crashing motorbikes that they hire to them unlicenced,why dont the Thai government licence the bike renters and have an insurance policy for them? probably 90% are grog related incidents and most skeletal injuries by the sound of it.

As much as i feel sorry for the hospitals i think they take money then invest a bit back in infrastructure not new bars.

these aussies are bludging off poorer countries, like thailand.

 

and we complain about the costs of just a few thousand asylum seekers?

Only visitors from countries who have reciprocal arrangements with Australia are entitled to free medical care while here, and even this is subject to limitations

So billy stop shooting your mouth off without having all the facts. Cherry picking stories or part thereof to justify your bigotry again I see.

3 comments



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