Ever since I was a little biddy boy, I have heard the mantra about American healthcare: “The Best Medical Care on Earth is in the Good Ole’ USA”. Now I am a bit older and a lot wiser, and have learned that it just ain’t so.
My wife and I were involved in a serious car crash. I escaped with no more scratches then what I get after trimming some bushes in the garden, but my wife had a very severe injury to her right hand. She had to have her hand literally reconstructed, and she has lost a middle finger and half of two others. Certainly not happy about losing part of an appendage, but very happy we did not lose a life (which at times was a real possibility). My wife stayed at the huge Bangkok International Hospital for nearly a month, and will have a couple of months of outpatient attention to her injury, and I now feel safe in reporting about the medical care in a good Thailand hospital from first-hand experience.
In Thailand, there are two types of hospitals: government hospitals which offer basic service at little to no cost for the general Thai public and the private hospitals, which are not government subsidized, and care is paid for by cash or covered by private health insurance, which is inexpensive for Thais and expats alike (that will be subject of another post on this site soon).
Initially after our incident, we were delivered by locals that witnessed the accident to the closest hospital, which was a government shop (yes, the spirit of getting involved to help others in a crisis is very much alive in Thailand, thank God). We stayed there just to take care of the most immediate requirements, and then proceeded via ambulance to go quite a distance to Bangkok Hospital. Bangkok traffic is one of the worst in the world, and despite sirens and flashing lights, our ambulance inched forward to its destination. This is expected for an ambulance run in this city, so there is a lot of medical care provided inside the vehicle. After about an hour and half, we pulled into the Emergency Room of Bangkok General, and the medical staff jumped to our attention.
A word about the medical staff: they look and act much more professional than you will see in a typical American hospital. All nurses are dressed in white, spiffy and starched uniforms with the little nurses’ caps we see sometimes in old American movies from the 50’s or earlier. Bangkok Hospital is an International Hospital, so many of the staff speak other languages, most often English. There seems to be more nurses, more tech people and more doctors than I would see in the US. And Bangkok Hospital works on the philosophy that they do what the patient (customer) wants, and that is for immediate attention to injuries and pain, and also have the patient as comfortable as possible in every way. For me, this is a contrast to the US where nurses dressed in pajamas (aka scrubs) seemed to be mainly concerned about giving medical care, but not a great deal of attention to the small needs of the patient to make things comfortable. And absolutely no regard for the families involved.
Thai doctors almost universally speak English perfectly, and often other languages as well. Like American doctors, they are well trained, most having spent some time studying in the UK, Germany, the US, or Australia.
Bangkok Hospital is truly an International Hospital, with patients coming from all over the world. You will see Arabs, Africans and Australians, along with every other possible nationality. Hospitals actually compete for their reputation in Thailand (remember when America was all about competition?), and also compete with medical care available everywhere in the world. In order to get international customers, they have to provide superior service than what you will find in Dubai, Detroit, or on the Danube. And in my opinion, they do it, and do it very well.
In Bangkok Hospital, all rooms are private rooms, and all are much bigger than a private room in an American hospital. They are similar to a small suite in a nice hotel. They even have “bellmen” with hotel style carts to take your luggage (or whatever you have) up to your room. In the room, there is always a second bed designed for the spouse (again, providing the service that customers want and will be most comfortable with). I have stayed with my wife every day and every night as she went through her treatment, and I like to think that this has helped her to get better during her treatment. We also had a third bed added for my wife’s adult son to stay with us as well. Also in the room is full size refrigerator, microwave and personal safe (at no cost).
All the standard hospital food is excellent, with several styles of food for different cultures, and another menu is provided that delivers various cuisines from better restaurants in the area. The room is serviced every day by a cleaning crew similar to what you see in a good hotel. And of course there is wifi and television with stations in a dozen or so languages.
Within the hospital lobby there are at least two Starbucks, a MacDonalds, several Delis, Japanese restaurants, Indian restaurants, nice casual dining restaurants, restaurants catering to Muslim tastes, a cafeteria that is like a food court in a shopping mall and plenty of other shops, including a big 7-11. Also in the hospital lobby there is often a classical music quartet playing, sometimes with a singer, that is first rate. Everything is designed to make patients, family and visitors extremely comfortable about coming to Bangkok Hospital.
One of the large buildings on this huge hospital campus is specifically for heart and cardiac system issues, and this place is noted as one of the world’s best. There are also huge areas devoted to medical treatment of diabetes, spinal injuries, sports medicine and just about anything else that are major issues. And all of it is super clean, super modern, super professional looking, .with extremely polite service given by all sorts of people around the lobby. It is like there are hundreds of Concierges catering to every need.
I am no expert in evaluating a doctor’s performance, but as a patient here, the doctors come across as very professional, knowledgeable and helpful. Maybe we were just lucky with the doctors we ended up getting, but the professionalism from the doctors seemed much higher than the level I have gotten in the US. And the bottom line is that my wife will fully recover to the best level that could be expected with her injury.
But Bangkok Hospital does not accept Medicare, Obama-care (or more accurately, Obama-control), the V.A. System or any other US government socialized medical system. They may take US private medical insurance (like Blue Cross), but that needs to be verified in the US. If you have to pay cash, the cost of staying at this hospital is about 10%-15% of the cost in a US hospital. Thai private medical insurance is available to expats, and pays 100% of the costs if you check into a hospital (under most plans). My wife has a good program with BUPA (the big Thai medical insurance company) and she pays the equivalent of $900 USD per YEAR at age 56. It will not go up in price as she gets older. And when (or if) she turns age 65, she gets an annuity retirement check from the policy each month, which will return much of what she paid in premiums before. This is the kind of system that evolves when the government is not controlling healthcare.
I am kind of an old hand at getting medical service in American hospitals. I have stayed in several US private hospitals (including one of the finest, Stanford Hospital) and government hospitals (VA hospitals) for very extended periods with a host of medical problems that hit me a dozen years ago. Compared to the service we seem to get at Bangkok Hospital, the US hospitals seem absolutely “third world”.
My personal opinion is that with more and more government interference, medical care has deteriorated in the US over the last several decades. Doctors in the US work under constant fear and pressure of litigation. The FDA has evolved into an agency designed primarily to protect big pharmaceutical companies, and the same holds true for the AMA. New treatments that do not originate from big pharma are quickly rejected. That’s why you will find some cancer treatments producing results in hospitals in Germany that will never even be introduced in the US (and few will even hear about them). America may have once been the leader and innovator in medical care, but I believe those days have passed. And at the same time, medical care costs in the US have skyrocketed to the point that no one, even the very high income earners can afford to pay directly for any kind of medical care in America out of pocket.
Some will find fault in my personal report, and will continue to praise American medical care as the best there is, but these people have blinders on that could be shattered by real experience at a premium hospital in Thailand. Without really direct personal comparison, I don’t think a person should rate American medical care over any other place.
And here is a portal into a lot of information about getting medical care in Thailand that is extremely useful. This site is produced by the Tourism Authority of Thailand: ThailandMedTourism.com.
Patients Beyond Borders Thailand Edition: Everybody’s Guide to Affordable, World-Class Medical Tourism




First off I am very happy to hear your wife is doing well.
I am also happy to hear about the medical services here compared to the US.
I am very much looking forward to your post about private health insurance.
Since we have just relocated I am still shopping & would like all the info I can find.
Thank You for another very informative post.
Speedy recovery to both you & your wife
Mike
Thanks so much for the good words, and it looks like we will be OK.
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Greg, Glad to hear Tena is doing well and received top rate health care. Enjoyed your interesting article and look forward to the next. I used to think US health care system was the best, but I think I know better now through you and others. I have not been overly impressed with what I’ve seen here and expect it to get worse.
Greg,
So sorry to read about your wife’s injuries. Tragic. I wish her the best and look forward to meeting her on my upcoming trip.
You’re correct about hospital care in the US-it has deteriorated in quality and clearly lost focus on caring for the dignity of patients. I too am looking forward to learning more about health insurance.
Thanks Greg.
Dave
Hi Greg,
Sorry to hear about your accident, Tan and I wish youn both a speedy recovery!
Driving in Thailand is a sobering thought and one never to be underestimated, ironically I had just had my heart done in Bangkok Hospital (teatment second to none!) and was recouping in Pattaya at a friend’s place, on the very last night i was complimenting myself having not managed an accident all week in thedaily chaos on the roads there, when,she ( Tan) wanted some shopping from Big C! I was being directed into the carpark, when the motorcylist came from no-where at a million miles an hour on my inside – Bang! he was ok – bike was wrote off – 4hrs later (after Police and Insurance) we were driving back to Burrirum at high speed to collect my luggage for my return to England and confromted two more horrendous accidents where people were dying at the side of the road and there was nothing we could do to help apart from comfort those involved until ambulances arrived. I dropped the car at Toyota in Burrirum and caught the VIP to Bangkok. In a Taxi to the Airport we came across two more bad accidents on the Airport approach road involving coaches and many people! As I climbed aboard my flight to England I reflected on 24 hours of glum experience and sobering thoughts which expressed the reality of driving in the ‘Land of smiles’.
We can never take our eyes off the unexpected dangers that lurk or await you! The additional freedom on the roads in Thailand can sometimes come at a price?
Speedy recovery!!!!!!
Regards John
Thanks John for the good words. Glad to see you made it through the chaos of Thailand roads alive and well. This has got to be about the biggest danger for an expat in Thailand, and I am glad my wife & I are alive after our car wreck. Wife will be in a recovery mode for the next month or two, and she is now missing some fingers, but we will be generally OK and thankful it was not worse. We’re going to do a lot less driving ourselves on trips out of town (out of Chiang Mai), and absolutely no more driving within Bangkok. Glad to hear about your recovery from some repair on your heart at Bangkok Hospital. Yes, service there is absolutely first rate, and this made our ordeal a whole lot easier. Hope everything is well in England, and hope you can return soon. Even with the road danger, Thailand is still a great place to live.
When I was in a VA hosp in indy, they broke my knee, they did not make an accident report, and I have been bed ridden for 11 months. I had to sign out of the hosp to save my pension. Now they treat me like public enemy number one. I need a total new knee, it was damaged so bad. It sure makes me feel betrayed by the system, I was in Udon Thani many years ago and wondered if there was any help over there for the guys that elected to stay there, I loved being there and had many friends from there. anyway I am glad you have good ins and have A good life with your wife, swats, D cup ( not sure how to spell it, LOL)
Thanks for the report. I also had some major big problems with the VA. Had a VA nurse give me too much of a blood medicine which resulted in me having to go into surgery and suffer a lot of pain and near death. They kept me so drugged up and screwed me around so much, I didn’t realize that I could have filed for malpractice — but didn’t realize until too late that this has to be done within one year of the incident. You should talk to somebody — not in the VA — about this possibility, but do it quickly as has to be done within that one year. Sounds like they are screwing with you in this regard and waiting for that clock to tick out past that time.
Over in Thailand, my wife is able to get really good insurance, but I cannot. I had too many diseases, including cancer, in the past plus I am a bit old (65) so no private company will take me. I have to pay out of pocket here in Thailand, but luckily it is pretty cheap. If I get really sick, I will have to come back to the US for my Medicare and the stupid VA again.
Good luck to us both.
I’m sorry about your wifes injuries, but I’m glad to hear you seem alright.
I’ve also had extremely good experience from the hospitals in Bangkok compared to the ones in Sweden (Where we barely even have any major private health care to talk about). I was hit by a very extreme food poisoning and I was rushed to the emergency room here in Bangkok.
I was met by doctors with a bed as soon as I arrived. Compare this to Sweden last time I was in a car crash, I had to sit in the emergency room and wait for about 3 hours (Which isn’t too long compared to other stories about western health care) before they even took a look at me.
They were very quick and effective, I was then placed in a private room with a big 40-50″ TV, mini fridge with free drinks, a very comfortable bed (Big enough that my girlfriend could sleep and hold me during night) and a very nice bathroom that beats most nice hotels.
They did not allow me to eat anything but soup, which tasted great. My girlfriend could also go to the spa in the building and take care of herself while I was in bed, watching movies.
Ofcourse they also had free wifi.
Overall, the experience was great. This is one of the most obvious moments where I have realized that the western world is so far behind the asian world in so many crucial aspects. I’m so happy to live in Asia and I don’t plan to go back home for a while…
Good story. “I don’t plan to go back home for a while…” Me too. Think I will stay till the duration.