Healthcare in the Philippines
This may seem like a odd concept to a western society and that goes beyond cruel.
However I will tell you about our recent experience prior to the birth of our second child. We went to the hospital emergency room for my wife. She was running a fever and had been sick for several day. So we get to the emergency room and after about 4 hours they decided to admit her. I paid the emergency room fees of 5200 pesos ($160.00). Then per policy they require that I pay 80% of the approximate bill prior to admitting her. She was 7 months along in her pregnancy and was having contractions. In addition to running a high fever and low blood iron levels. They required at 4pm (4 am east cost time) on a Tuesday I pay 30,000 ($750.00 ) pesos to admit her. Considering I just drew out $200 dollars for the emergency room and my credit limit on my cards was $500.00 this placed me in a situation. I tried to explain to the hospital that I was unable to draw additional money till noon the next day. I could not call to get my credit limits lifted to draw money out as it was 4am US time.
They knew the fact that they were placing mother and child in danger. Yet refused to admit them till I had the money to pay prior to service. Actually told us to leave and come back when you get the money. They knew she needed a blood transfusion and knew she needed an incubator for the baby. She also had contractions and 101 fever. They used this to calculate how much cash I would need to admit her.
I was very lucky friends and family came to my rescue to help with the initial fees and allowed her to be admitted to the hospital. All was well and the baby was born as scheduled not early. Yet it should be a warning to all that visit the Philippines. Hospitals require 80% estimate fees prior to admission.
http://www.timpotter-philippines.com/20 … rvice.html
I wondered that even almost all the vitamins including very basic medicians which are regularly required by almost all category of peoples, are very much costlier than India as well as any of the poor countries also.
In my view, Philippine Govt. must think over on this issue seriously and try to make the medical facilities including medicines much affordable by all poor & the common men as well as.
This is required highly also because the philippines is prone to storm disasters every year to some or the other extent and many people tend to suffer because of uneffordable medical facilities, services, medicines etc.
mediquest in toril i found to be good .
i do noticed that in general the hospital can use an upgrade on medical equipment ,but i come from Belgium and consider us belgians as a very spoiled ppl in many ways ,we are used of the best of the best and often forget were we coming from as we judge others
thank you doktor Reyes for the good care you gave me.
http://www.affordablecebu.com/load/dire … 26-1-0-414
While I live in Cebu, I have lived and worked in manila. Manila also has world class hospitals, excellent doctors and care. yes many are trained in the USA as are doctors in Cebu and come back to the Philippines to continue or set up new practices. Who would want to live in the USA over the Philippines right? Many who have received PHDs in medicine in the Philippines would have to re-attend college in the USA at enormous costs just to get that piece of paper that would qualify them to practice in the USA, so they stay in the Philippines. Many stay in the Philippines because they like their own country. I know maybe a hard concept to grasp...
Insurance premium (this was 6 years ago): Blue Cross HMO around $400 / month paid for by employer, which later on I paid from my own pocket when I got terminated. I paid an extra $75 because I wanted it upgraded to PPO. MediCal / MediCaid (don't remember what the amount was) was deducted from my salary. If I wanted a family member covered, I had to pay extra per person.
Co-pay: $25-30 per doctor visit. ER: used to be just $50 but then increased to $100. If I did not have insurance, $300+ / visit. With just MediCal / MediCaid, according to another patient I had a casual conversation with: $120+ / visit.
Prescription for epilepsy: used to be $25, then increased to $50 per refill. Whether I get 150 tablets (the max) or just 60, the price for refill is still the same. The price of 150 tablets without insurance: around $850 (this was what Walgreens was going to charge while I was in the process of COBRA (changing from employer-paid to personal account). So I just waited for the transition to get done since I had extra prescription for a couple of weeks.
Cost for delivery via C-section at California Pacific Medical Center in SF with insurance: $3600 co-pay. Anaesthesiologist: $900. If I did not have insurance: $32,000. My newborn was covered for the first month only. After that, I added another $450 / month to my insurance premium to have him covered. So, we were paying more than $10k per year. Just 2 months before we left for the Philippines, monthly premium for me an my son went up to $1,080.
In the Philippines:
My family has insurance and PhilHealth through my husband's employer. No premiums, co-pay, fees for tests, or ER fees with the insurance company's accredited doctors and hospitals. PhilHealth deduction from his salary is minimal. There's a limit on coverage on hospital rooms (Private rooms or smaller only). Usually, doctor's fees range from PhP350 to PhP600 if doctor is not accredited.
Prescription for the same medication for epilepsy (not covered by insurance): PhP50 / tablet ( namebrand manufactured by Glaxo-Smith-Kline). (significantly less than the $5.60 / per tablet in the US without insurance).
Prenatal visits: PhP600 (because the doctor was not accredited). Total cost for delivery via C-section, including hospital stay and anaesthesiologist: PhP140k at FEU Hospital. When my son had dengue, the 7-day hospital stay and doctors' fees including tests at Commonwealth Hospital totaled PhP19k. But since he was covered, we paid PhP99. My husband's 10-day hospital stay for pneumonia: PhP170k. We shelled out PhP19k because there were no available private rooms for the first few days (only large suites which are only partly covered by insurance).
Cost of healthcare is a lot cheaper here. As to quality of service and facilities, CPMC in SF (one of the top 50 hospitals in the US): stellar. Commonwealth and FEU Hospital: sufficient and comfortable. I heard that hospitals like Makati Med and Medical City have very good service quality and facilities, but they are more expensive. But still cheaper than in the US.

Tim
you are so right i found out the hard way { i am aussie }
i am not covered by any health care ,and i was taken to a certain hospital in davao city.
with a infection in my right leg and was rushed into surgery for a urgent opperation.
they cut my leg open and then i had a gash 9" long 3" wide then they informed my wife
they were going to take my leg off the surgeon { doctor death lol } said its your life or a limb whats it going to be.
so my wife said to him you are not going to remove the leg and with that he had nothing more
to do with me, so from the very 1st day my wife had to do all the dressings from that moment on,
2 weeks later a doctor came and saw me and said i could go home so we prepared ourself to leave the hospital and went down to billing office to make arrangments to fix up the bill
they told us there was no way we were leaving the hospital till the bill was paid infull.
so we had to return to the room, they had us in a private room. So they kept us there for
a total of 5 wks just like holding us hostage till the bill was paid . i will say the meals were supplyed which i couldnt eat, and the bed linen was changed about 4 times a week.but that was all they would do for me the wife had to do everything for me, i did try to leave once but security blocked me at the door, they even had security checking on my room so i couldnt leave. now after 16mths. i still have a great gaping hole in my leg which looks like it will never heal, he made sure he was going to amputate my leg i am a diabetic type2 but im still alive so look after you health what ever you do
and ill keep soldering on and steer clear of hospitals
the total bill was approx 278000php.
they released us after my family in oz had paid 75%of the total bill and i had to pay the other 25% within 1 mth ..which i am still paying to this day,i told them i can only pay what i can afford.since then.
they have been around to our residence to try to collect ,but only the kids were home,
since then we have relocated. the wife gave them our new address ,and they have been
around here also trying to collect
rod iddles wrote:Hi vetretreat.
the total bill was approx 278000php.
they released us after my family in oz had paid 75%of the total bill and i had to pay the other 25% within 1 mth ..which i am still paying to this day,i told them i can only pay what i can afford.since then.
they have been around to our residence to try to collect ,but only the kids were home,
since then we have relocated. the wife gave them our new address ,and they have been
around here also trying to collect
UNBELIEVABLE Rod, I take it they charged for the additional days they held you captive...Is that right or not?...If they did charge you I would refuse to pay they rest and state as to why...Threaten a lawsuit for the illegal captivity and they will probably fade away...AS I HAD SAID MANY TIMES BEFORE ON THIS THREAD...MUCH OF THE MEDICAL CARE HERE IS JUST AS CORRUPT AS THEIR ELITIST GOV...How many foreigners as well as affluent Filipinos have been duped by the GREEDY hospitals and various doctors/surgeons...I'm sure there are many good ones out there but I personally think there are a lot more worse ones....How many foreigners have left the country over the years because of this type of treatment and corruption...I know I am going to be one of them very shortly...The country is doomed to be nothing more than a 3rd world nation until the people wake up and realize why the poverty rate is still on the rise and take a firm stance for real change...
Just curious Rod; what medical establishment was this nightmare experience taken place at???
timpotte wrote:The health care system in the PH is totally different then the US. With lower costs comes lower standards. Can you obtain quality health care cheaper? YES, however it is buyer beware and many times in a third world country money dictates care not the welfare of the patient. There is no equality of care between a developing country and a 1st world country. Example the city of Cebu (1 million people) has only 5 incubators for prenatal births. My wife went into pre-labor I paid to reserve one just in case.
Tim
You mentioned developing country...Right!! It has developed from a 2nd world status to a 3rd world country just in 20 years...If there is such a thing as a 4th world nation this country is surely headed in that direction once the rest of the world realizes investing here is a one way road to disaster....
timpotte wrote:I wrote this a while back however still true today.
This may seem like a odd concept to a western society and that goes beyond cruel.
However I will tell you about our recent experience prior to the birth of our second child. We went to the hospital emergency room for my wife. She was running a fever and had been sick for several day. So we get to the emergency room and after about 4 hours they decided to admit her. I paid the emergency room fees of 5200 pesos ($160.00). Then per policy they require that I pay 80% of the approximate bill prior to admitting her. She was 7 months along in her pregnancy and was having contractions. In addition to running a high fever and low blood iron levels. They required at 4pm (4 am east cost time) on a Tuesday I pay 30,000 ($750.00 ) pesos to admit her. Considering I just drew out $200 dollars for the emergency room and my credit limit on my cards was $500.00 this placed me in a situation. I tried to explain to the hospital that I was unable to draw additional money till noon the next day. I could not call to get my credit limits lifted to draw money out as it was 4am US time.
They knew the fact that they were placing mother and child in danger. Yet refused to admit them till I had the money to pay prior to service. Actually told us to leave and come back when you get the money. They knew she needed a blood transfusion and knew she needed an incubator for the baby. She also had contractions and 101 fever. They used this to calculate how much cash I would need to admit her.
I was very lucky friends and family came to my rescue to help with the initial fees and allowed her to be admitted to the hospital. All was well and the baby was born as scheduled not early. Yet it should be a warning to all that visit the Philippines. Hospitals require 80% estimate fees prior to admission.
http://www.timpotter-philippines.com/20 … rvice.html
If I would had been in your position I would had immediately taken her to another hospital...
yes we were charged for the full time we were there
and it was davao medical school foundation hospital.
i would not reccommend it to anyone
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Get a free quotetype of specialist. My primary care physician was trained in South America. The HMO needs him because they can't find enough doctors in the US due to high insurance costs from malpractice lawsuits. Our care here is questionable at best.
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