Showing posts with label Thailand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thailand. Show all posts

November 25, 2006

Health Care in a Thailand International Hospital Versus Health Care in the USA: The only difference is the difference between night and day
I (Mark's Mom) once worked as an office nurse for Dr. Tom Masters in Springfield, Illinois. A better doctor never existed. We actually ran our appointments on time. He studied each medicine a new patient was on to determine if the patient benefited from it or not and made certain that each client from the governor and the CEOs whose physicals we did to our elderly nursing home clients and the guys in the jail he and I visited got what they needed and were well informed about their health status and needs. Occasionally, a new client would ask a question like: " Doctor, it wouldn't make any difference if I did "x" instead of the "y" you are suggesting, would it?" Doctor Masters would get a serious expression on his face and peer down at the client and say: "The only difference would be the difference between north and south." That expression comes to mind as I think about the care Mark received at Bumrungrad International Hospital in Bangkok compared to the care he is getting and will likely get at the VA hospital and the care reported to me by friends including nurse friends.

I have to ask "What has happened to nursing (as well as health care) in this country?" The Thai nurses seem 100% compassionate, caring, respectful and always ready to help you. Your IV monitor beeps and you don't have to ring a bell. The nurse or aide comes to fix it. Far too many American nurses give the impression they are way too busy to help anyone, even in situations where I see them chatting with each other and moving at a snail's pace. Recently, when Mark had waited way past his appointment time and been begging to lie down at the VA, a nurse implied he could not be in pain as his blood pressure was not up. Doesn't morphine and compazine lower blood pressure and isn't it possible other factors allow a patient to be in pain without elevated blood pressure? A while later , I asked the nurse if she could estimate how long before Mark would be seen. She said: "I think you can have too much information." Mark finally solved his need to lie down to get relief from pain in his chest due to tissue and bone damage from the chest wall tumor and 15 very recent radiation treatments. He went out into the hall and laid down on the floor. This action caused a flurry of activity and produced a place to lie down in the treatment room. His appointment was at 9 and he was told he must not report in later than 8:30 sharp. He saw the doctors at 12:30 and I must say the doctors were exceedingly respectful and compassionate as were some nurses in the treatment room. By the time Mark left the oncology clinic and waited in line at the pharmacy three times and waited until his number came up to wait in line, it was 4:30 when we left the VA: a long day for a very sick young man who still had to ride the 3 and a half hours back to Austin.

Other stories of nursing care in Austin Texas and elsewhere: After thyroid surgery in Austin, a friend reports that she rang the bell for pain medication. She could not talk above a whisper due to swelling from surgery. The person at the desk said: "Speak up. We can't help you if you don't speak up." No one was sent to check on the patient and pain medication was a long time in coming. Another nurse friend on vacation recently in Colorado had an occluded ureter and could not urinate and was in pain. She reported that the emergency room staff treated her as if she were a drug seeking addict. The nurse who catheterized her, took only a specimen and did not empty the bladder. When asked why she had not emptied the bladder since the patient was unable to urinate and was uncomfortable, the nurse offered to do another catheterization. There also seems to be a rash of people falling off of guerneys or being dropped in transfer from guerney to bed . The hospital staff often say they are way too busy and too overworked to help a patient especially with something like getting a tooth brush out for someone told not to get out of bed after surgery. I had this experience in an Austin Hospital. "Everyone is busy and can't help you." Why did I find this hard to believe when after asking for a hour for the tooth brush whenever someone came into the room, one nursing assistant who was too busy to help me, spent a long time telling me that she had bought a farm and all about the farm and then asked if she could have my potted plant if I didn't want it. A social worker wandered in eventually and got the tooth brushing equipment for me. How can nursing education and nursing texts and journals in the USA claim the nursing profession is still all about compassion, caring, thorough head to toe assessments, and holistic nursing when nurses and nurse's assistants today are "way too busy and overworked to listen to and attend to client's needs "? Today in the USA you never know if you will get a compassionate, caring, competent nurse or a Miss Rachet behave-alike from One Flew Over the CooCoo's Nest or something in between. What's your opinion? I invite comments/stories from anyone who agrees and from those who don't. Your thoughts are important!
PS FROM MARK - "So sorry that I can't answer e-mail right now. I am trying to get the pain under control and get some healing of my chest. When I am able, I will e-mail you all. Thanks for all your support. It means everything to me. " Mark

June 20, 2006


Mark,Mom,and Sister Stephanie in front of the picture of the Thailand King in Mark's condominium lobby when we last were all three together at Spring break

Mr.Mark called me today from his hospital room at Bumrungrad Hospital
Mark is currently getting a three day regimen of chemotherapy.Since his creatinine clearance is a little off normal, his platinol has been decreased and the doctor is considering shifting from Platinol to carboplatin to make it easier on Mark's kidneys. Don't forget Mark. He needs support more than ever.It is the support of friends and strangers that keeps him alive as he wages a battle against liver cancer (a metastasis from the primary tumor which is now gone.) Your support means everything to Mark. Your support can keep him going in his battle against cancer. You can donate to his treatment fund by sending a check to the Highland Park Baptist Church in Austin. (See instructions in the right hand column.) It will help keep him in treatment until medicare kicks in next April and we can bring him home. If we run out of money he will come home sooner.
The King of Thailand is celebrating 60 years on the throne Mark tells me that the beloved King of Thailand, who is the longest reigning monarch in the world, declared that all streets in Bangkok would be clean for the celebration of his 60 years on the throne and people made sure that every scrap of paper and speck of dirt was off the streets and they did not let any dogs on the streets to make sure the streets were clean . Royalty from all over the world were in Thailand to join in the celebration. The King's royal color is yellow so every Thailand citizen and foreigners small enough to find a shirt to fit them bought a yellow shirt and the country was a sea of yellow. The King rode the royal barge down the Cho Phyra River with other royals on board. Citizens turned out by the thousands to see their King and the foreign royals and a huge firewords display. All Thai people love the King and there are pictures of him everywhere. There is a huge picture of the king in the lobby of Mark's condominium. Each day there are fresh flowers in front of the picture of the King. Several months ago James (Mark's Aggie stepfather) was sitting in the lobby of the condominium off and on for several days and he thought that the Thai people were very friendly as they made a wai (y) for him by putting their hands together and bowing. Later he found out that the Thai people were greeting the picture of the King in a sign of respect. Thai, no matter how rich or how poor,are proud to be Thai and often say: "Farang (foreigner)if you lucky in the next life, you be born Thai.
Training a Parakeet
This is the continued Saga of Kuhn Petey bird.This is the miracle bird that I found outside my 11th story bedroom in Bangkok. He was sitting outside the window looking at himself in the glass (see earlier story). Mark told me this week that after cooing to Kuhn Petey for weeks and months to get him to talk and putting his finger in the cage and cooing to get Petey to sit on his finger, he got tired of cooing and just grabbed Petey and put him on his finger and after a couple of times Petey got the picture and now will ride around on Mark's finger and come back to the finger when Mark turns him loose in my bedroom to fly around. Hmm there may be a behavior modification principle in here somewhere.

April 08, 2006

Mark and Stephanie with powder on their faces at Songkran festival

Family Reunion Begins In Bangkok
Mr. Mark's sister Stephanie arrived in Bangkok with two of her teacher friends (spring break from teaching in Yokosuka Japan). She brought food stuff that is hard to buy in Thailand, books for Mark, and a crockpot to cook roasts in. The mom is headed out from Austin on Monday, suitcases similarly loaded but with different food stuffs including two large cooked briskits, and sacks of cream gravy mix (a staple of cowboy cooking). There will be a lot of cooking going on and we will cook some Thai dishes too. I have been thinking about eventually co-authoring a receipe book with Mark and a Thai friend and selling it to raise money for his cancer treatment or giving it to people who send donations.
Songkran. This is the Thai New Year. People wear Hawaiian shirts and have the big water guns and hoses and spray each other with water and put powder on peoples' faces. . Fun and laughter add some quality to Mark's life and may be what keeps him going. Does anyone want to join the Richardson Family Reunion in Bangkok this year or next for Thai New Years)?
Mark's Birthday is April 20.