My $301 Hospital Visit

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июл 2024
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    Patients in Malaysia enjoy an excellent healthcare system that is graded 49th in the world by the World Health Organization. Furthermore, the country is continually making investments to improve standards of care, with programs targeting rural and low-income patients.
    In this video, Andrew shares his experience in a Malaysian hospital.
    00:00 Start
    0:20 Health care in Malaysia
    3:00 Andrew's Visit in Hospital
    8:00 Health Care Overseas
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Комментарии • 382

  • @nomadjim
    @nomadjim Год назад +248

    I'm currently in Kuala Lumpur recovering from surgery at Prince Court and I can attest it was so much better of an experience than I have ever had in the US. I had the comprehensive screening Andrew is talking about in the video about 6 weeks ago. It is indeed an amazing experience having so many things tested that you would never get in a US physical for a fraction of the cost. And getting everything done in one day, including the discussion with the doctor...just incredible. During the screening they discovered a serious issue I was unaware of and recommended I see a specialist there at the hospital. That's what led to my needing surgery. I can't help but wonder how long it would have taken the medical professionals I deal with in the US to catch this issue, as this was apparently something that had been developing for a while. I'm so glad I was here in KL to have the screening, find out about the problem, and get it fixed. Highly recommend taking a trip to Kuala Lumpur sometime and experiencing the health screening for yourself.

    • @MikeCris
      @MikeCris Год назад +12

      Wishing you a speedy recovery.

    • @nomadjim
      @nomadjim Год назад +3

      @@MikeCris Thanks, Mike!

    • @xyz987123abc
      @xyz987123abc Год назад +5

      I have gotten a new doctor assigned to me by Aetna. He is the only one I could find in the middle of nowhere. My primary concern was the doctor had to be a fellow male.
      During my first visit he asked me some questions but never once looked in my ears or mouth. He looked horrified when I suggested I remove half of my clothes so he could do what I call the touch, press, squeeze of my abs and various organs. I think if I told him I was having an issue with one of my man parts which would involve putting gloves on and not only looking at but touching my man parts he would be befuddled.
      What the F'n hell are these near quacks learning in American medical school? My last prior doctor, whom I loved, would once a year do a comprehensive exam. I thought I was hearing things when he suggested I remove ALL of my clothes. He clarified shortly later that normally he has men leave on their socks but since I has major blood sugar issues at the time he needed everything off.
      He was the only doctor who ever asked me about my erections and after I answered told me why he asked. I offered to show him but he said we could skip that part. LoL 😆

    • @klwthe3rd
      @klwthe3rd Год назад +5

      Awesome true testimonial!

    • @propertyguru22
      @propertyguru22 Год назад +5

      Singapore offers very good medical care. You will pay 40% more than in KL but the Doctors are more experienced.

  • @TaipanTex
    @TaipanTex Год назад +62

    I've been to Malaysia, and the rest of Asia, multiple times over the past 40 years. For those of you who haven't been I can attest to the fact that Malaysia is a "First World' country on par with Western Europe, USA, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Japan in terms of infrastructure, technology, medical care, safety, quality-of-life, etc. Actually it maybe be better than those countries in many respects.

    • @katewalker5358
      @katewalker5358 3 месяца назад

      aus is a bit of a diasater at the moment all treatments take for ever

  • @2404640
    @2404640 Год назад +104

    Local Kuala Lumpur resident here. Even for me I do find Prince Court value for money. And it's true, the care they provide is with TLC and sincerely from their heart. So blessed to be Malaysian!

  • @hazimsam-kh1yf
    @hazimsam-kh1yf Год назад +64

    I am a middle class local Malaysia, my parents are from the poorest in peninsular its the Kelantan state, and I am grateful that with subsidised education here that is in decent quality i am able to become a Data Scientist and earn decent money, my sisters are all highly educated and able to work, we have medical that is affordable both my parents have diabetes and they been taking care of, we have affordable medical insurance which is very helpful and both private and public health care sectors are very good

  • @williamgras5598
    @williamgras5598 Год назад +122

    I went to this hospital a few years ago with a friend and did this check up. That’s when I realized that the West medical system is expensive garbage

    • @xyz987123abc
      @xyz987123abc Год назад +3

      Truer words have never been spoken..

    • @tahiti1
      @tahiti1 Год назад +12

      You mean the US, not "the west". Most of "the west" has universal or subsidised healthcare. But much of Asia and some of LatAm have excellent affordable healthcare too. Only the US is totally overpriced and underserved, and has the fastest declining life expectancy

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +1

      Maybe due to high wages for MD and nurses?

    • @murimurimrui
      @murimurimrui Год назад

      @@tahiti1 Universal/subsidized healthcare sucks. It sounds good on paper, but the treatment sucks. Wait times are long, that you're more likely to die from the disease/issue while in the waiting room. And often times, they don't thoroughly check you at all. They give you pills and send you on your way.
      Anyone who says universal/subsidized healthcare is great never had to experienced the waiting room of the ER.

    • @williamgras5598
      @williamgras5598 Год назад +1

      @@keangwooichoo6138 From my understanding of the western socialised system the problem is partly because of MDs salaries but mostly because of intense bureaucracy and absolute lack of competition (since the government hires the great majority of MDs and the administrators don't have incentives or the possibility to properly negociate salaries). The morale is that there isn't enough private enterprise to compete against government provided healthcare and the health ministers make sure its extremely hard to start private practises.

  • @kimberlyg123
    @kimberlyg123 Год назад +95

    As a minimally insured American, I received a 90k bill for an emergency room visit for a kidney stone. Unreal.

    • @vikramganasen
      @vikramganasen Год назад +29

      Holy shit. And ya'll just have to be okay with it? In Malaysia its about 2k USD at best.

    • @nmc1859
      @nmc1859 Год назад +20

      Medical care is the #1 reason for bankruptcy. Plz contest the bill and maybe they can write it off?

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +23

      Eek.

    • @azdbuk
      @azdbuk Год назад +19

      Same with my elderly Mom on social security. $86k or something. They chop it down with insurance and write some off I imagine, also the billing offices usually have financial based programs. But the number means nothing, it is like they throw giant numbers out there hoping some will pay or some insurance will pay, but the arbitrary nature and the ridiculousness of the system is evident. It makes getting ill in the U.S. a financially ruining experience at times.

    • @andrewchong2616
      @andrewchong2616 Год назад +18

      I’m a local malaysian here and my wife had a kidney infection and admitted in thompson hospital (Singapore based hospital located suburbs of KL) just last month. Had her surgery done and inserted a tube in her urinal tract. Total bill came to about RM29k equivalent to USD6.5k. All scans included ct scans (kidney & heart) ultrasound, medication. 6D5N stay in twin room.

  • @user-tr1bm6gq1o
    @user-tr1bm6gq1o 8 месяцев назад +18

    I too am currently in Malaysia and just had surgery at Assunta Hospital, phenomenal and compassionate humanitarian hospital serving the good of humanity...soooooo loving and caring doctor, staff, people, what a magical and fulfilling experience!!

  • @2404640
    @2404640 Год назад +42

    True story! Had a relative admitted to emergency due to intensive chest pains at 8 pm. Called my cardio specialist who is a resident specialist at this particular Prince Court Hospital. He drove all the way frm his home 40km away to attend to this case. How spectacular is that? Medical services to die for

  • @akakikhujadze359
    @akakikhujadze359 Год назад +52

    I've always been astounded by the efficiency and extensive reach of Malaysia's healthcare system, and how it manages to remain so affordable at the same time. Truly a great country!

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +3

      Subsidised by taxes and oil money lol

    • @nobitanobi8888
      @nobitanobi8888 Год назад

      ​@@keangwooichoo6138 they better be subsidizing my petrol and my healthcare, or else I'll riot.

    • @KhalixMR
      @KhalixMR Год назад +10

      @@keangwooichoo6138 private hospitals are not subsidised

    • @shamshulanuar7718
      @shamshulanuar7718 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@keangwooichoo6138till me must recognise that

  • @RN0010
    @RN0010 Год назад +37

    Medical tourism is quite huge in malaysia..more than 1 million of Indonesians came here for medical treatment and spent billions annually. Most of them cited the costs are up to date, cheaper and the treatment are more friendlier and humanistic. Very glad to be Malaysian.

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +1

      That is why their "smart" gov wanted mayo clinic in bali. But they cannot compete with Malaysia or Singapore. They can try.

    • @kaypendergast5676
      @kaypendergast5676 9 месяцев назад

      Sounds like a strong option for Australians.

  • @ThisnametaKenny
    @ThisnametaKenny 10 месяцев назад +16

    4 hr hysterectomy surgery for someone close to me cost her USD21.90 at a public hospital in Malaysia including aftercare meds. She is a foreigner married to a Malaysian. The care and concern was excellent.

    • @fghn5639
      @fghn5639 6 месяцев назад

      Heavily subsidized by the government

  • @oceanside88
    @oceanside88 Год назад +25

    I'm blown away. I can't even get into health care in Canada. They try to get rid of you because it's so broken. I was impressed with Mexico healthcare, so reasonable especially dental. But Malaysia sounds like nirvana of preventive medicine. Exactly what I'm looking for. Why is the North West so backwards? Shaking my head.

    • @miakamei1751
      @miakamei1751 6 дней назад

      Because the west doesn't value human lives.

  • @vikaamiryan6475
    @vikaamiryan6475 Год назад +15

    Agree! Malaysia is a great medical tourist option.

  • @aaronbirkbeck9638
    @aaronbirkbeck9638 Год назад +31

    I take my family to Prince Court for our annual checkups (we live in Bali). As Andrew says, it is brilliant! We have also tried a place in Bangkok. It was very good, but not to the level of Prince Court. My wife did the research and found nothing but great reviews about Prince Court, so we thought we would give it a go. Last time, I even popped back a month later for a couple of specialist appointments resulting from the annual checkup. What Andrew doesn't mention, is that less than one kilometre up the road is the excellent Pavilion Shopping Mall, surrounded by excellent hotels, including those from the likes of Marriott Bonvoy chain, etc.

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +1

      Thanks, Aaron.

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +7

      Rest assured, we are British standard health care. In fact, the first mask precursor to n95 was invented by a Chinese malayan doctor in penang when he was asked to assist in the manchuria plague by China. He almost received the Nobel prize for medicine but due to our Asian colour of skin, only whites get the honour those days long ago. His name Dr Wu Lien-teh

    • @Danji_Coppersmoke
      @Danji_Coppersmoke Год назад +5

      @@keangwooichoo6138 I learn something today. He should get Nobel prize for sure given how many life it saves. Yes, Asian things is real. Chinese hybrid rice inventor also didn't get any price given billion lives depend on it now.
      In asia, medical treatment is not just good standard but also treated well with good attitude and care.

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +4

      @Danji Coppersmoke Chinese medicine and western medicine are used together in asia, in kl we hv a chinese medicine hospital called tung shin. Dr wu said that the manchuria plague was due to airborne virus (like covid19). But many people especially western doctors were skeptical. After he invented the original n95 mask, many lives were saved and he returned to penang victorious. Those who did not wear his mask died as fatality was very high. He was forever respected by the Chinese medical Council. But malaysia never received a Nobel prize for medicine because only whites can do that long ago.

  • @brandondoerfler9868
    @brandondoerfler9868 Год назад +36

    Was amazed by KL on my first and only visit. Just one more reason to visit there again!

  • @h30202
    @h30202 Год назад +19

    Prince Court is like a 5 star hotel.

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +1

      To me it is (I am malaysian) but we hv others like kpj, sime Darby medical centre, sunway medical centre, Adventist penang, lam wah ee penang, island hospital penang, kota damansara medical centre etc etc etc so many like mushrooms blooming after rain

  • @sejengkalsehasta3211
    @sejengkalsehasta3211 Год назад +26

    It's not just the cost factor...you got to have a nice total package of staying in KL for a week, or a month, or 3 month...the people, the hotels, the grab drivers, the LRT, MRT, buses, the food, the climax, the environment, the travel planning, etc
    Conclusion : KL is best cost for healthcare...and for a visit

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +2

      Value for money.

    • @vegannomad
      @vegannomad Год назад +5

      Looking forward to the climax when I visit in two weeks 🤣

    • @kaypendergast5676
      @kaypendergast5676 9 месяцев назад

      This is giving me an idea for my own health....

  • @GeneandRenee
    @GeneandRenee Год назад +42

    We found the same excellent medical care last year in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. In a state of the art emergency room, would have cost us at least $20,000 in the USA, ended up costing us $295.

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +4

      Glad you got good care!

    • @dojocho1894
      @dojocho1894 Год назад +3

      India has great made for foreigners heart surgeries Indian Doctors are very talented. They have plans where they will pick you up at the airport private recovery room personal nurse ..it is amazing.

    • @robertshannon4547
      @robertshannon4547 Год назад +2

      I’m in San Miguel de Allende, where was this ? Which emergency room? My friend had a tetanus shot 💉 at MAC, $500.00 usd

  • @OneJuanWon
    @OneJuanWon Год назад +25

    $301 USD well spent! I have read/heard from other sources as well about the value one can get from the medical services available in KL, and it's a no-brainer to do this for the experience as well as piece of mind for your own health. The level of care and services in the US isn't as great as some proclaim, a few spots in SE Asia definitely has the advantage here.

  • @user-mu2lp9jo6m
    @user-mu2lp9jo6m Год назад +22

    Wow! This is incredible. I'm thrilled about the upcoming Nomad Capitalist Live event in Kuala Lumpur this year.

  • @user-ls6th8xp3m
    @user-ls6th8xp3m Год назад +23

    Very cool, Malaysia is a great destination for a healthcare and travel experience.

  • @derkhawkins2575
    @derkhawkins2575 Год назад +14

    In a U.S. hospital, $301 would cover the cost of a few Tylenol.

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +2

      Sadly true. If memory serves, they were $50 each in 1994.

  • @RN0010
    @RN0010 Год назад +13

    Prince Court Hospital are considered the 5 star private Hospital here.. Celebrities and royalties comes here for treatment. Other private hospitals all over Malaysia also provides the same services and facilites with less prices.

  • @user-lv8jr6er1n
    @user-lv8jr6er1n Год назад +10

    Really looking forward to Nomad Capitalist Live in Kuala Lumpur

  • @LisaCulton
    @LisaCulton Год назад +25

    It's going to cost you a lot more in Switzerland. That's what I can tell you. I'm a doctor here.

    • @Xalta_Sailor
      @Xalta_Sailor Год назад +5

      I love your honesty! The comments from US doctors are trying to justify their system rather than just saying their wife wants a new Benz😂

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton Год назад +3

      @@Xalta_Sailor It's just expensive in real life. The machines, equipment, software, reagents, antibodies, supplies and experienced personnel are not cheap, no matter how much people want folks to believe that these "low healthcare cost" countries have some kind of special magic sauce. Places like Germany and England keep costs "low" by paying healthcare professionals diddley squat and by severely limiting access to services and having a limited menu of services available. That's why there's so many German doctors in Switzerland. And if I can't afford to purchase a Mercedes Benz on my salary as a Board-certified medical doctor, then I'm going to quit.
      To give you some perspective, the type of "regular" light microscope that I use on a daily basis is around 40k -60k USD. And that's just one piece of equipment.

    • @WFH910
      @WFH910 Год назад +2

      Yo @@LisaCulton , how come you haven't posted any videos for 1 year now ? And before those there were several months with just some shorts. Good thing that the Auswanderluchs had you on at least.
      I'm living in Germany for a number of years and I'd like it if someone would call this country out for being overrated in pretty much all regards. All you can find about Germany on YT is mostly the usual (positive for the most part) myths.

    • @Ziegfried82
      @Ziegfried82 Год назад +2

      @@WFH910 Germany went downhill many years ago, it was pretty good in 2007 but the last time I visited in 2016 things were falling apart. Now?! I still have contacts there and let's just say it's went to hell. Only a fool would live in Germany now.

  • @gary449
    @gary449 Год назад +12

    I went to to a Hospital in Taiwan after suffering a crippling back injury and muscle seizure which lasted a week prior to the flight there. I got admitted into a hospital in a small southern town, and within 30 minutes got evaluated, had an xray, diagnosis. received an Intra muscular injection of muscle relaxants, two weeks of pharmaceutical grade medication and it all cost me 70 CAD...Without insurance, Problem solved.
    Health care in asia is Beyond reproach compared to Canada or the US had i stayed in Canada It would have taken two months to see a doctor.

  • @samijune5824
    @samijune5824 Год назад +24

    I sliced my finger here in the US in the middle of the night last year. It ended up being nothing but I went to the ER bc I accidentally wrapped it too tight and was in pain for several hours.
    I was charged $3000 for a little unnecessary glue and a tetanus shot. The ER was empty and I was in and out in an hour.
    My insurance covered about 2k but I was left with $800 on the bill, I couldn't believe my eyes when I opened it. I requested an itemized bill to be mailed twice now and haven't received it. It's a shame that going forward I will be afraid to recieve emergency healthcare in the future due to the outrageous cost and likewise insurance.

    • @vikramganasen
      @vikramganasen Год назад +2

      Madness. That's probably $100 in Malaysia or less than RM500.

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +4

      Geez.

    • @nmc1859
      @nmc1859 Год назад

      Yes..i worked in a usa er. The prices are high based on the thought that it's an 'emergency' ..either way, too outrageously high imo. Ik they used to charge pts $700 for a liter of normal saline iv. This is y healthcare is bankrupting. And of course BIG PHARMA. Our USA govt gave fizer over 100 billion for those crap jabs already

    • @chaotiongsai
      @chaotiongsai Год назад

      Why doesn’t your insurance cover everything? You don’t have employee insurance?

    • @majasatri
      @majasatri Год назад +4

      OMG..tht might cost USD100 or less in Malaysia...but for treatment at public hospital...it cost only RM2 for Malaysian the rest cost subsidise by government

  • @RickFidelisReed
    @RickFidelisReed Год назад +7

    Last December, I checked myself into Hospital San José Tecnologico de Monterrey, Mexico at 9am left at 3pm.
    StarTrek modern with top tier professionales. I lost track of the tests administered, they took blood and put other stuff in me, EKG, X-Rays etc.
    Learned T7 and T8 were fractured. At the end of the day, the cost was just under $500usd.
    Very Satisfied Customer, I am.

  • @klwthe3rd
    @klwthe3rd Год назад +11

    Nice to actually hear how a quality wellness visit should go. I remember awhile back Andrew talking about southeast Asia having very good quality healthcare. I know some central and south American countries do a good job too. I love having options.

  • @fobbitguy
    @fobbitguy Год назад +6

    Needed to go to the emergency room in Thailand. Went to an expat hospital. Received excellent care which included blood work and an MRI. Bill? $250 US. Lol. Still can't believe it. When I went back to the US I submitted the bill to my health insurance carrier for reimbursement. I was denied because I didn't submit a prior authorization before I went. What a scam.

  • @beverlyburke-majcen4782
    @beverlyburke-majcen4782 Год назад +6

    Thank you so very much Andrew for sharing 🙏

  • @popocucu4829
    @popocucu4829 4 дня назад +1

    Many of my Indonesian friends will fly all the way to KL once a year for a full body check-up plus dental treatment.

  • @markus-r3y
    @markus-r3y Год назад +8

    This is nice!! Looking forward to Nomad Capitalist Live in Kuala Lumpur this September

  • @BetterYet
    @BetterYet Год назад +19

    I'm a Canadian resident visiting Italy. Had a minor accident. Visited a Doctor staffed Guardia Medica. Got 4 stitches along with excellent care. The bill was $0.00....

    • @mysmartieteevee3036
      @mysmartieteevee3036 Год назад +1

      The govt Italy subsidises medical fees 100%?

    • @BetterYet
      @BetterYet Год назад +3

      @@mysmartieteevee3036 not always. There are fees for some things that are not emergencies. However many things are subsidized. Last year I needed an xray and MRI. I only waited 4 days for an appointment and the cost was 130 euros. Very modern equipment, too.

    • @mysmartieteevee3036
      @mysmartieteevee3036 Год назад +2

      @@BetterYet good to hear

    • @Bhuvan88233
      @Bhuvan88233 Год назад

      @@BetterYet Same, need an Mri and an X ray. Got it the same day. Cost was 30 dollars
      I think cheap is better than free healthcare; affordable to everybody without insurance too
      Indian btw

    • @andrewchong2616
      @andrewchong2616 Год назад +2

      We visited Italy too 7 years ago and my wife had a sudden stomach cramps and discomfort. She had gastric and vomiting. Went to a local hospital and also charged EU0. Apparently it’s a tourism emergencies for tourist

  • @gabesimmonds8421
    @gabesimmonds8421 Год назад +12

    I needed a skin tag removal. Called about four dermatologist in my area but none could give me an estimate of the total procedure. Literally it was scary as it can be $1000 but it can be a lot more you don't have a number. Called a clinic in Panama City they were very transparent from the beginning so decided to do it there.
    Entered into an excellent clean clinic super professional doctor and i paid exactly what they told to me. It was $ 145.00
    Needless to say i have insurance in the US but nothing in Panama.
    The entire healthcare system in the US becsme a full blown scam.

    • @sofiaglove
      @sofiaglove Год назад

      I had a keloid/skin tag removed from behind my ear a few years ago at an aesthetic clinic in Malaysia. Costed me RM200 about USD50.

    • @PassionPno
      @PassionPno Год назад +1

      @@sofiagloveDon’t go to an aesthetic doctor. I went to an actual general dermatologist for mine. It cost me RM 85. Aesthetic doctors are expensive for no good reason.

    • @sofiaglove
      @sofiaglove Год назад +2

      @@PassionPno I was feeling guilty paying mine coz I thought it was too cheap. They spent good 2 hours performing minor laser surgery on me to remove the skin tag. I thought they deserved to be paid more. I'll never get used to it. Lol. I returned to the same clinic and had hair transplant surgery. 2000 grafts for about USD3000. The year before that I had lasik eye surgery in another eye specialist clinic for about USD800. I love Malaysia!

  • @Kikiconsilience
    @Kikiconsilience Год назад +12

    As someone in my 20s with kidney failure this is amazing! Health is wealth and prevention is key

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +1

      Take care as dialysis is bloody expensive.

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +5

      Hi Diana, please send us an email at help@nomadcapitalist.com and let us know how we can get in touch with you to help.

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +1

      @Nomad Capitalist thank you Andrew for helping. 20 plus is too young. I do body check every 6 months. Example upper abdomen ultra sound(private clinic rm 120), blood test(rm 1). I have gluten intolerance plus polyps in my gallbladder.

  • @KhalixMR
    @KhalixMR Год назад +3

    I am a local and my private hospital of choice is Prince Court Medical Centre, first due to proximity to my work location. They also gave good service, structured process. The doctors gave advice with your benefits in mind, rather than to immediately do operations, they'll suggest options to avoid it if unnecessary. Blood work result came in very fast, just over lunch. The cost is actually comparable with other private hospital in Malaysia, considering its location.
    Now that the Conlay MRT is operational, I can just walk take the train and walk to the hospital, no need to drive.

  • @vegannomad
    @vegannomad Год назад +31

    Just booked flights from Indonesia and my appointment for early June. Since I recently turned 43, decided to splurge on the “Signature Male (over 50)” package for $400 😂 The Dexascan alone costs more than that in the States! Also looking forward to exploring KL for a week 😊

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +7

      Good for you! Do come back to KL for Nomad Capitalist Live. www.nomadcapitalist.com/live/

    • @heatherk2023
      @heatherk2023 Год назад +15

      My dexascan in Mexico with state of the art new machine was $2.51 usa dollars! EKG 4.00 USA, Ultrasound of full abdomen and pelvic areas $15.00, chest xray 8.00 mammography 8.00
      Total wss less than 45.00 usa
      And the Actual radiologist doctor read the reports and printed scans and reports in the moment
      Never doing USA medical again

    • @Flitalidapouet
      @Flitalidapouet Год назад +5

      @@heatherk2023 Mexico is going in a good direction. I'm jealous of you. Enjoy.

    • @zaharizak
      @zaharizak Год назад +4

      Master Jedi said, "Your bones..dexa scan you should. KL, explore you must." 😁✌

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +3

      Happy belated birthday and welcome to my country.

  • @RN0010
    @RN0010 Год назад +4

    Had my yearly blood tests for diabetes, cholesterol, cancer marker, lungs, liver, kidneys and related organs at the normal private clinics.. Costs about rm180 about USD40. Get the results within days..the clinics will send our blood to a third party pathology company specifically dealing with blood tests. The results normally about 5 pages long with all the tests and results.. Good to know early before things get serious..

  • @thankfuljourneys
    @thankfuljourneys 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for sharing your experience in this insightful video. I completely agree with US healthcare being a machine. I have worked as a cog in the healthcare industry for over 30 years.

  • @cryptoricardo
    @cryptoricardo Год назад +4

    I could easily live in KL, absolutely

  • @dougscott188
    @dougscott188 Год назад +8

    I had wrist surgery in November in Florida. The care was good, but massively expensive. I had health insurance, but it stilled cost me well over 7k. My insurance approved me for 32 visits of paid physical therapy. They approved it on Dec 28. Thus I had 3 days to use them as it reset January 1. 🤷‍♂️ At 58, my renewal on Jan 1 was $10,700. Suffice to say I cancelled it and now hope for the best and walk several miles a day and intermittent fast to hopefully stay healthy.

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад

      Hope you are better now.

    • @dougscott188
      @dougscott188 Год назад

      @@nomadcapitalist yes thank you

    • @21moffzar
      @21moffzar Год назад +1

      With 7k after insurance, better take flight and come to Malaysia..enjoy tourism and at the same time take healthcare..enjoy your health and life 😊...Malaysian might take things for granted as they only have to pay only RM1 or USD0.25 for normal medical checkup and medicine...my wife is diabetec and regularly we have to collect insulin (for free) without actually know how much it is actually cost

  • @MAT-244
    @MAT-244 Год назад

    Same here is Bangkok. I recommend CGH and Pat Rangsit Hospitals. Great service and prices are so cheap. The one in Sukhumvit (Bom...) is a ripoff. Recently, I had an eye condition (redness). Doctor and prescription cost me $30. I walked in, no appointment. Within 15 minutes, I saw the eye specialist. Within 30 minutes, I was out with my prescription. Service was 10/10. My eye is back to normal 100%.

  • @Flitalidapouet
    @Flitalidapouet Год назад +3

    Amazing.

  • @kangaroocrypto4663
    @kangaroocrypto4663 Год назад +8

    I'm going. What's not to like.

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +4

      Hope to see you at Nomad Capitalist Live while you're there.

  • @CowboyBillUSA
    @CowboyBillUSA Год назад +3

    It's amazing what happens to medical services pricing when you remove the for-profit "healthcare" corporations from the equation.

  • @keangwooichoo6138
    @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +3

    1 million indonesians (i suppose the higher income group) visit malaysia yearly for medical care. Most visit melaka and penang.

  • @victoriamanley9961
    @victoriamanley9961 Год назад +10

    Malaysia and Penang have great medical.

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +1

      100% true

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +1

      Penang list : Adventist, island hospital, lam wah ee

    • @PassionPno
      @PassionPno Год назад

      @@keangwooichoo6138Lam Wah Ee is trash. Doctors let people die in the name of affordable healthcare. I have heard enough stories of this issue from nurses who work there.

    • @wanakmar9933
      @wanakmar9933 29 дней назад

      Penang is a state in Malaysia 😊

  • @isabellesender
    @isabellesender Год назад +8

    Brilliant! With all our medical technological advances, all of this should now be very low cost and efficient. Obviously, if one follows the money, one knows why the US Healthcare is a scam and sucks. I had better medical care in Europe.

  • @Croc555
    @Croc555 Год назад

    No worries . Been to Shenzen Hospital. Better than Home. It feels like one big Familyl

  • @bionborys1648
    @bionborys1648 Год назад +1

    Damn! Great info. (We all knew Andrew was healthy anyway.)

  • @mattanderson6672
    @mattanderson6672 Год назад +2

    I Agree!!
    I had THE Best medical ever in Thailand
    Cost less than $200

  • @user-py1cu8xh3r
    @user-py1cu8xh3r 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks.

  • @wesandcindy1729
    @wesandcindy1729 5 месяцев назад +3

    Andrew, thank you for recommending this thorough checkup. We are in KL now getting it done because of you! Keep on doing what you do because even if someone gleans one little piece of good info from you, it's worth it. And who knows... you might even save a life some day with your recommendations.😮

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  5 месяцев назад

      Hi there! We're thrilled to hear that Andrew's recommendation led you to take action and get a thorough checkup in Kuala Lumpur. Keep prioritizing your well-being!

  • @keangwooichoo6138
    @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад

    Singapore is good too but you will need to visit mount elizabeth hospital. Very pricey.

  • @Anglophile2012
    @Anglophile2012 Год назад +3

    Very informative

  • @DomsDocs
    @DomsDocs Год назад +1

    might go and have my knee surgery there, i wonder how much that would be.

  • @Inukshuk67
    @Inukshuk67 Год назад +2

    Kent Brockman seemed to have difficulty pronouncing Kuala Lumpur. And he's a news anchorman!

  • @currentuser4584
    @currentuser4584 Год назад +2

    Yeah, medical tourism is big business in SE Asia. But sometimes it's best not to know about your medical status - else doctors will rub their hands with glee should you require some treatment (ch - ching ... sound of cash register). Ignorance is bliss (sometimes). My wife was on holidays in Singapore slightly pre pandemic and fell ill with some virus (maybe heavy flu). Went to Raffles in Singapore. Cost was $1300 SD and wanted to hospitalise her. She said no and they sent her off with meds. Bill could have been thousands. Stay well O/S, try not to get sick, go to the cheapest public hospital and carry highest med/travel insurance.

    • @vegannomad
      @vegannomad Год назад +2

      Singapore is not Malaysia

  • @SkipinlLA
    @SkipinlLA 5 месяцев назад

    Dominican Republic 3 nights in ICU and 2 stents were $46,300. i had a heart attack there. third stent in Orlando florida was $2,500. RX for statin and Plavix was $125.00.

  • @syedputra5955
    @syedputra5955 Год назад +11

    For locals, prince court is expensive. We go to cheaper places for our medical. Locals who visit prince court normally are executives from the government owned companies under corporate accounts.

    • @vikramganasen
      @vikramganasen Год назад +7

      Actually also right, we have many private options who provides equal medical care, PC is expensive but its value added with extra services to cater and attract executives.

    • @Aeybiseediy
      @Aeybiseediy Год назад +1

      Where is the cheaper option for medical screening? Last time I checked most executive screening prices are around that range.

    • @muhdyusuf24
      @muhdyusuf24 Год назад +2

      My uncle went to hospital Pantai. It's a private and an expensive hospital. Got laid there for weeks and had to pay crazy amount. Our family decided to just canceled that hospital and go to hospital Serdang instead. The doctor immediately found his problem and he is cured very quickly. Don't just go to fancy and beautiful looking hospitals. The private hospital at my area is excellent though. There are foreigners who gets their medical checkup here. I'm very impressed.

    • @aircommandslipperz
      @aircommandslipperz Год назад

      @@Aeybiseediy maybe the government clinic or hospital

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +1

      Locals usually visit gov hospitals unless no choice. It is like UK's NHS.

  • @heatherk2023
    @heatherk2023 Год назад +2

    My dexascan in Mexico with state of the art new machine was $2.51 usa dollars! EKG 4.00 USA, Ultrasound of full abdomen and pelvic areas $15.00, chest xray 8.00 mammography 8.00
    Total wss less than 45.00 usa
    And the Actual radiologist doctor read the reports and printed scans and reports in the moment
    Never doing USA medical again

    • @klwthe3rd
      @klwthe3rd Год назад +1

      Where in Mexico? Border town or Mexico City?

  • @rsivkova
    @rsivkova Год назад +2

    Andrew, which hospital in Istanbul would you recommend for the same comprehensive tests?

  • @Aubatron
    @Aubatron Год назад +1

    I wish things were more streamlined like that. No bullshit, just go there, go there, go there, you're done get the hell out. The Canadian medical system is a joke. Getting a checkup done with just a general practitioner takes months of booking. If you actually need a medical procedure done, it can take years.

  • @estarestar929
    @estarestar929 10 месяцев назад

    Hi thank you for useful information. How about hospitals in Tbilisi any hospital you can recommend?

  • @stlaw08
    @stlaw08 Год назад

    I have never heard you mention dental treatment which will save tremendously.

    • @LisaCulton
      @LisaCulton Год назад +5

      Brush and floss daily.

  • @yanivyaffe
    @yanivyaffe Год назад +1

    Nice

  • @TheSimArchitect
    @TheSimArchitect 9 месяцев назад +1

    One thing I notice, coming from Brazil (used affordable private health care there, public is bad) is that the richest "first world" countries have terrible and expensive service (maybe better if you use expensive places in the United States). It's all about saving lives. If you're not dying, they don't seem to care, they will even shame you for going to the hospital "just because you had pain or couldn't breathe". I only tried Canada, England, Sweden and Netherlands. Portugal seems to have better service but I didn't try it while there.

    • @zanzillahsaruji9966
      @zanzillahsaruji9966 6 месяцев назад

      Is Hospital in Brazil better than Malaysia ?😊

    • @TheSimArchitect
      @TheSimArchitect 6 месяцев назад

      I don't know, but they seem to care more about us than Dutch, Swedish and British ones. Sorry to be honest. This is my impression. I used private health care in Brazil 99% of the times, though. @@zanzillahsaruji9966

  • @00000a0009
    @00000a0009 Год назад +2

    Can you make a video on global health insurance? I for example am with no residency worldwide and I could find only 1 health insurance that could open an account with me. But even with their best plan don't cover everything (no cover for previous illnesses not even with a low cap)

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад

      We have covered this somewhere here or on nomadcapitalist.com if you search the keywords.

  • @lynnottingham1764
    @lynnottingham1764 5 месяцев назад

    I am Canadian and health care is so called "Free" and now a days that says a lot. No quality health care. Long line ups, emergency hospital visits waiting 6-8 hours on average, have to make appointments sometimes 2 weeks in advance. The lack of concern medically is truly sad. Those who can afford it go to Mexico.....being only a short flight away. Thanks for sharing Malaysia is another option.

  • @darrinelford1473
    @darrinelford1473 Год назад +7

    The healthcare in Asia is awesome. Found a GP who did minor surgery on my foot. Cost: 100 MYR.
    Also Thailand has incredible hospital care and cheap
    We get screwed over in New Zealand

  • @JonnyMReck
    @JonnyMReck Год назад +6

    Turn your head, cough, get a new passport

  • @sajaman777
    @sajaman777 Год назад +6

    Thx for the valuable info
    Concerning the cost of check-up, would a tourist be treated the same way a national or a resident is?

    • @Flitalidapouet
      @Flitalidapouet Год назад +10

      Yes, because it's a private facility. One price only.

    • @sychin8459
      @sychin8459 Год назад +8

      Most of the lower and middle income locals go to public healthcare as universal healthcare is available here.
      It just cost RM1.00 for locals to get dental treatment and to see a doctor at the government clinic.
      You can get treatment within the day at government clinics , but depending on what time you go, it can be a couple hours wait if you are not early. Medicine is highly subsidized for locals at the public care facilities. My friend got her baby delivered at the government hospital for RM 50 a few years ago. That got me really tickled. It was equal to the cost of a meal for the family.
      Locals who use private healthcare facilities are treated no different from foreigners. Most would use their insurance to pay.

    • @Aeybiseediy
      @Aeybiseediy Год назад

      @@sychin8459 i'm a local but I still wonder if its possible to get extensive medical screening in government hospital? I thought they don't entertain non emergency cases there.

    • @Aeybiseediy
      @Aeybiseediy Год назад

      @@sychin8459 I did medical checkup at KK before but they only did basic blood and urine test and possibly an xray but they only entertain your request if you're doing it for something ie university or work requirements. Im just wondering if theres a service for more comprehensive medical checkup in gov hospital instead for people with no follow up appointment and no money to go to private hosp.

    • @sychin8459
      @sychin8459 Год назад +4

      @pinkcrow go check at Klinik Malaysia. If there isn't a real need, then likely no. Resources are limited and should be allocated for those who really need the checks. You can ask the Klinik Malaysia staff for screening programs if available. Sometimes they hold those. I am actually surprise they would do tests for those going for work placements.
      It's the same with public healthcare in most countries. You cant just walk in and ask for free comprehensive checkup when there is no reason to.

  • @hemantparakh6462
    @hemantparakh6462 Год назад

    There are only two Examination
    1- 50ml Examination
    2- 150ml Examination

  • @chiangea3495
    @chiangea3495 4 месяца назад

    Pantai Medical Centre and Assunta Hospital are as good as Prince Court Hospital. 😊

  • @dojocho1894
    @dojocho1894 Год назад

    As a Physician A CT scan 1 view, in china is $100. The machine is chinese made....That same scan here in the US on the same chinese made machine is $1000 1 View.

  • @apakansaja8505
    @apakansaja8505 Год назад

    CDrom....??? They shud gives a flashdisk.

  • @tahiti1
    @tahiti1 Год назад +1

    Comparable costs and fantaatic healthcare in Thailand and Colombia too. Colombia ranks ahead of US and Malaysia in global healthcare rankings.

    • @neonomad1939
      @neonomad1939 Год назад +4

      I find that hard to believe about Colombia being better than Malaysia. The best countries normally attract medical tourist to their shores in droves such as Thailand, Malaysia and Turkey.

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +2

      Ranking.
      1. Malaysia
      2. France
      3. Thailand

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад

      ​@@neonomad1939 turkey I heard dental surgery

    • @tahiti1
      @tahiti1 Год назад

      @@keangwooichoo6138 thats not the WHO healthcare rankings? What is your source?

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад

      @tahiti1 that is health tourism ranking.

  • @xyyx1091
    @xyyx1091 Год назад +1

    👍 What about dental treatments?

  • @tibbinova
    @tibbinova 3 месяца назад

    I'm just 40, yet I'm already grappling with a multitude of health challenges. Arthritis in my neck, hip pain, knee and ankle issues, foot discomfort, and even numbness in the lower parts of my legs make walking painful and difficult. The neck pain adds to the discomfort. Additionally, I'm dealing with hearing loss, tinnitus, and heart rate issues. It all began 8 years ago with a myriad of symptoms, but local doctors dismiss them as just "wear and tear" from aging. I strongly suspect it's an autoimmune condition. Doctors here just send you to another doctor with an referral. Then that doctor says something like, "I don't know why you are here." We're eagerly anticipating leaving not just for better medical care, but for everything else too. I feel like 💩is about to hit the fan, and it's making the urgency even more real. I never thought I'd feel this disillusioned about being American and living here. I wish Malaysia had a citizenship program like the Philippines for those with chronic medical conditions. I fear my health won't improve here. I'm unsure if it's genetics, our food, or both causing these issues. I"m just so tired, can't work(dependant), but SSDI says you are not disabled. The whole system is 🦆ed.

  • @patrickmaloney1810
    @patrickmaloney1810 Год назад +1

    How much does it cost to join that executive program?

  • @MrJarod2003
    @MrJarod2003 3 дня назад

    is that the cost becasue you have incurance cover ? or total privately funded

  • @rodart1945
    @rodart1945 Год назад +1

    So this medical attention is available to anyone in the world? I live in the Caribbean, I am thinking if anyone can go, I would love to be there asap to get a full exam done.

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад

      Yes, it is open to anyone. We would love to see you in KL for Nomad Capitalist Live.

  • @robertspencer5219
    @robertspencer5219 Год назад

    Sounds like conventional advice, not all of which is good. Getting your numbers that fast and courteously is awesome though.

  • @TheHomeDesigner123
    @TheHomeDesigner123 Месяц назад

    I believe that medical services in Malaysia are tremendously inexpensive, before you add in the airfare to get there. I know from where I reside in Canada airfare to Japan will run me $7,000 to $10,000 a person.

  • @Laura-dy1vc
    @Laura-dy1vc Год назад

    It sounds great, but Is the weather really good? I’ve read it is incredibly humid all year……living in the western US - it guess it is all relative.

    • @zaki-pq1ps
      @zaki-pq1ps Год назад

      Subjective, tropical weather is not for everyone. Currently we have heatwave

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад +1

      Some tourists like it some don't.

    • @PassionPno
      @PassionPno Год назад

      According to Japanese and Koreans people I know, Malaysia is less hot and less humid than summer in their countries

  • @satprepegyptcairo8000
    @satprepegyptcairo8000 Год назад +2

    I'm curious: Does pricing depend on your residency status, or is it the same if you are a tourist?

  • @ThatsEunice
    @ThatsEunice Год назад

    I said if I were to ever have a child, it would be in Asia. Especially Korea or Japan.

  • @namira4218
    @namira4218 Год назад +5

    Watched 2 Canadian sisters vlog-talk ranting abt terrifying experience seeking medical treatment at a city hospital E&A. It was an emergency medical situation for one of them. Cant recall what it was but they waited for almost 8 hrs for a doc to attend to them despite having medi insurance - quite costly but compulsory in Canada. Monthly deductions frm pay. Claim hospital medical services there in bad situation. But to wait 8 hrs to be attended by a doc seemed a tadbit incredulous🤔. But they swore it really happened. Seem a prevalent thing. Their family planning to leave Canada asap bc everythg getting costly ie wages swallowed by all kinds of insurance costs leaving little to spend, giving impression public services in poor condition. But its Canada? It's still underpopulated. Resources should be plentiful, abundant? Unlike America there's probably strain or overloading govt spending thinly spread perhaps. constrained or ltd for want of better description. Yellen just announced unless US govt increase debt ceiling ASAP serious trouble gonna rear its head! What does that really mean? How will rest of world be affected? US debts or deficit still sky rocketing? Jeez😮.

    • @chaotiongsai
      @chaotiongsai Год назад

      From your dumb comment, you know nothing about America.

    • @jeffho1727
      @jeffho1727 Год назад +2

      Western Canada. My wife had had gall bladder stones and was waiting for surgery, at that time had been on wait list for about 2 months. Had an attack, 7 hours writhing in pain in an Emergency waiting to be seen. It passed, they did the sonogram but because the attack had passed, no emergency and further wait for another 3 months. Health care here used to be something to be proud of, its part of our taxes but no real choice of not paying. I have lost a lot of faith in Canada in the last few years.

    • @jamietkh5862
      @jamietkh5862 Год назад +2

      Goodness me! Those sisters were telling the truth! Sorry Jeff you and wife went through such ....(don't know how to say it without being clichéd).... prolonged anxiety-filled situation, a mental anguish state. Read Msia news report a son sent father for cancer treatment to quite a renowned (for its specialists, med profs etc) University hospital (a public hosp). Treatment whole series of work attended by oncologist over long period time. Father fully recovered. Clean bill of health frm cancer. Discharged and if I recalled it was reported the total bill came to approx. +,- USD500.00 including lodging, f&b, the caregivers etc. Son was shocked! Bill enumerated every single item charges and clearly stated Msian govt subsidy amount - a hefty sum. So the father reaped benefits of govt subsidy san insurance. Actually tax payers money too. But that's OK bc the dad is a senior citizen - deserving ofc. Senior citizens here medical treatment/consultation in public hospitals thruout the country is FOC! Medicines are cheap 1/4 that of private ones. Hubby gall-bladder stones with latest laser op treatment in a well-known private city hospital at that time exchg rate bill came to approx USD3k +,-. San scapel, small scarring area, less pain, quick recovery. Voila! Many patients frm neighbouring countries SEA, NEA, the Brits too thronging Msia for good medical specialists treatment at affordable costs.

  • @javaskull88
    @javaskull88 Год назад +1

    I hope venture capitalist hedge funds don’t start eying overseas medical center.

  • @PatNeedhamUSA
    @PatNeedhamUSA Год назад

    Do they have V02max testing as well?

  • @mike95826
    @mike95826 Год назад +1

    Are their services, at those prices, only available to confirmed residents (property owners, passport holders)?

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +4

      No, it is a private hospital rated the best for medical tourism in the world and as such tourists are welcome.

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад

      I never heard of any visa holders not being able to go to hospitals in my country. In fact my gov encourage medical tourism.

  • @Dpond2k2
    @Dpond2k2 Год назад +4

    I wish I saw this before I left KL! I might have looked into going here. Do you know of a similar options in Bangkok?

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +1

      Bumrungrad Hospital. Do come back to KL for Nomad Capitalist Live. www.nomadcapitalist.com/live/

    • @tahiti1
      @tahiti1 Год назад

      Bangkok is full of world class hospitals

    • @keangwooichoo6138
      @keangwooichoo6138 Год назад

      Well bkk and kl is not far away

  • @fizywig
    @fizywig Год назад +1

    Can I get surgery in KL on a 3 month visitor visa or is that a violation of this visa s terms and conditions?

    • @nomadcapitalist
      @nomadcapitalist  Год назад +3

      Definitely worth checking on, but people get surgeries as tourists all the time.

    • @abdulmuin4240
      @abdulmuin4240 Год назад +2

      Definitely can, there are million of Indonesian visit Malaysia to do varieties of surgery, some even do breast cancer surgery..

  • @withinhistoriesgrasp9307
    @withinhistoriesgrasp9307 Год назад +2

    Nearby Singapore has some of the best enginnering schools in the world as well

    • @cleanenergyinside1921
      @cleanenergyinside1921 Год назад +3

      Not quite as good as the engineering schools in Germany and China, of course.

    • @withinhistoriesgrasp9307
      @withinhistoriesgrasp9307 Год назад

      @@cleanenergyinside1921 the ratings of each of these schools changes each year
      Each often giving place to another
      But still singapores enginnering schools are among some of the top schools of that kind in the world

    • @cleanenergyinside1921
      @cleanenergyinside1921 Год назад +4

      @@withinhistoriesgrasp9307 And yet Singapore doesnt produce any good engineers compared to Germany and China. Singapore is more of an assembly nation than a creative one. So all the scoring means nothing when clearly many nations including all of Europe, Japan, China, US, Australia and Canada are way ahead in terms of actual engineering products and services.

  • @JR-eq6jz
    @JR-eq6jz Год назад +2

    That’s awesome. In the US it’s a fucking Joke. Insurance decides what people can get. And it’s basically all reactionary and doing tests when someone is already falling apart.

    • @jensz9360
      @jensz9360 Год назад

      Yes, preventatve care in US is NON existent because the money is in the disease and keeping you sick, not keeping you healthy. Why do you think people here are obese so much, even the food is geared toward that via processed foods everywhere.
      You go in to to the doctor for 1 thing and they prescribe a medication which has side effects (so it takes care of 1 problem and 2 or 3 more side problems crop up) And then there you go, into the rabbit hole of the perverse medical system. The doctors see this as a long term play and eventual surgery (HIGH DOLLAR). Its a cycle that is hard to break once you get in it. Nevermind the endless nonsense that is "medical insurance". (Which covers almost nothing noteworthy)

  • @hemantparakh6462
    @hemantparakh6462 Год назад

    50 ml soft drink is cheap

  • @EvolvedBonobo
    @EvolvedBonobo 11 месяцев назад

    Just did the same thing at Prince Court but with their "Superior Man" executive health screening package.
    Yes, it's a nice facility with an amazing health screening operation, but they gave me a heavy physical hardcopy report and will not email a digital version of the report. I emailed them the next day requesting same but no response.
    It's not very useful for world travelers, like me, often trying to reduce luggage weight, to tote around a bunch of paperwork.
    PCMC should ask patients at the beginning if they want the report digitally or physically, but they don't.
    Thanks for the video which turned me on to this! Are you aware of any similar facilities in KL that provide the same service but with digital reports?! 👍🙏

    • @brianleon79
      @brianleon79 5 месяцев назад +1

      Sunway Med Center. I guess most private hospital provide digital report.

  • @NewWorldHacker
    @NewWorldHacker 10 месяцев назад

    which hospital you go to
    i dont have Malaysia passport how much would be the scans

    • @brianleon79
      @brianleon79 5 месяцев назад

      Malaysia hospital charge the same for locals and foreigners

  • @richardahlstrom9694
    @richardahlstrom9694 Год назад

    Executive program? Can anybody do this?