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Elizabeth Tai's avatar

Hey Elle, sorry that you had to go through all these hoops in the United States just to get proper care. I knew it was bad, but when you told me all the runarounds that you've been giving, and the wait times! That's the most shocking thing to me because I've always assumed that just because you guys pay so much for medical care, you'd get immediate service.

Incidentally, I'm actually typing this from a hospital room after having surgery. I saw the GP who gave me a referral letter to see the doctor on Monday, Wednesday I made my way to the specialist. If not for some insurance mix-up I would've had an MRI and admitted the same day. The earliest slot I had for the MRI was Friday morning.

On Friday, I had my MRI appointment, then I saw the doctor after lunch after an hour's wait, then it was off to X-Ray, I got admitted, and a few hours later I was operated on. The whole thing was so fast I wished it was slower because I couldn't process the idea that I was going for an operation.

But this is a private hospital in Malaysia. If it was a public hospital, the wait times will be much longer. My parents were both government servants so their medical care is mostly free. I once had to wait almost a day with my dad for a bed because the hospital was packed. But he got it after about half a day, and it was a single room (due to his level of seniority in civil service.)

While most Malaysians' healthcare is almost free, it doen't apply for every case. In some rare cases where the medicine isn't subsidised, insurance would have to take care of it. A friend of mine, who had no insurance, had to raise money for her very expensive meds for her rare form of cancer. She was treated at a public hospital - The medicine was so expensive, it was in the five figures. Her case is rare, but it does happen, which is why many are still urged to have insurance.

That said, another friend of mine who had cancer only had to pay RM,1000 or so (about US$250) for her entire treatment, which included chemo, operation, hospitalisation, meds, the works. Another friend who had severe pneumonia ended up with just RM36 bill (about US9?). My mum who goes to the govt clinic for her meds, often comes back with boxes of medication. The clost? Just acouple of ringgit. (US$1 or so.) The government clinics are always very generous. I once went to the govt clinic and was given a BOX of medication! In private clinics it's usually 10% that. We are so, so greatful for the government clinics.

Malaysian healthcare is not perfect. Our govt hospitals are straining, and our doctors are overworked. But we Malaysians are also incredibly fortunate that we can choose between private and public hospitals, and we definitely do not have people in suits telling us whether we qualify for this or that treatment.

I can walk to a specialist without a referral letter, and just get treatment. (Have done so.) In the private healthcare sector, treatment is supposed to be prompt and fast. If it's slow we will certainly complain. For the government hospitals, we know that the queue is long, and we don't complain because we know that in the end, it wouldn't cost us our house.

I hope you get better soon, and hey, when you come back to Malaysia next, let's hang out and I could tell you more about the medical services here.

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Meredith Rom's avatar

Elle - I've followed you for a long time, I love your writing. This is so eye-opening. You come up with the most wonderful ideas and expose so many inefficiencies.

Want to do one an article on school systems next?

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