[i'm so sad .think about ur future.i wish u a bright future]
danukapeiris said:you can say avoid from Asiri hospital after a one incidence
crosswind said:This thread is more than 1 year old but everyone seems to be feeling the pain of your father. Let me also offer my deepest condolences.
Also there are some things about the Sri Lankan medical field which is sad but true.
If a patient passes away because of a doctor's negligence... there's no point if you take legal action. Because no doctor will give evidence against another doctor. This is because of the terrorist organization called the Govt. Medical Officers Association. This same mafia are the ppl who organize doctors' strikes.
If one doctor plans to give evidence against another doctor, automatically the terrorist organization will do every thing possible to stop it using threats and various tactics.
The second most unfortunate thing is not only doctors in Asiri or other private hospitals who are negligent. Same happens in government hospitals also. Unfortunately the news doesnt get exposed so often.
In UK or USA or any developed country, a doctor cannot even prescribe a pain killer to a patient without explaining in detail what he prescribed, why is he prescribing, what is the conclusion he has why this is the right medicine, what are the side effects etc. etc. And they prescribe medicine after taking adequate tests. In Sri Lanka, medicine is prescribed with trial and error. "Meka sathiyak aran balamu" is a famous saying with any (con)doctor.
Its a real sad situation indeed.

There's a document called Bed Head Ticket. It is taken in to custody of the director of the institution, when there's a complaint. The actions will be decided on the content of the BHT. No doctor can give evidence (what ever his expertise) which is contradicting with the BHT. Your accusations are baseless, as there are many cases of compensation paid due to medical negligence, but the most of these are due to "soda bottle reaction" of the patients, where they are provoked and fooled by NGO's which earn through handling such cases. Most of the time, these baseless allegations end as EPIC FAILS.crosswind said:If a patient passes away because of a doctor's negligence... there's no point if you take legal action. Because no doctor will give evidence against another doctor. This is because of the terrorist organization called the Govt. Medical Officers Association. This same mafia are the ppl who organize doctors' strikes.
GMOA only involved doctors in government service. GPs, doctors employed in private sector does not come under GMOA. Once again base less allegation, as some times these experts are foreign doctors.If one doctor plans to give evidence against another doctor, automatically the terrorist organization will do every thing possible to stop it using threats and various tactics.
It does not get exposed often, yes, everybody knows that it is due to lack of facilities. One or two patients die every day because ICU facilities cannot be provided. Even for other facilities, it's the same story.The second most unfortunate thing is not only doctors in Asiri or other private hospitals who are negligent. Same happens in government hospitals also. Unfortunately the news doesnt get exposed so often.
In practice it's nice. And you deliberately failed to mention that in those countries doctors see only 20 patients per day, and payed heftily even when payments adjusted according to the GNP. Let's see the ground situation. In a district hospital OPD attendance is 100-350. Only 1-3 doctors are available to see the patients. Now that means each doctor sees about 100 patients. OPD is open from 8-12 and 2-4, that is 360 minutes. each patient will get only 3.6 minutes!. Now what is your suggestion? See them as in US/UK and ask the rest to go home and come tomorrow, or see all of them? What is your solution?In UK or USA or any developed country, a doctor cannot even prescribe a pain killer to a patient without explaining in detail what he prescribed, why is he prescribing, what is the conclusion he has why this is the right medicine, what are the side effects etc. etc. And they prescribe medicine after taking adequate tests.
You have absolutely NO knowledge in medicine. Even in US/UK it's the same. For pneumonia in every country tentative treatment started until sputum / blood culture and antibiotic sensitivity report is available. Sputum culture costs 1200, and blood culture 1800. You want those investigations to be done in thousands in such a poor country? What is your alternative?In Sri Lanka, medicine is prescribed with trial and error. "Meka sathiyak aran balamu" is a famous saying with any (con)doctor.
People like you should be kept in an OPD for one day and should be asked to write down, name, age and presenting complaint of all patients in a OPD. Never mind on prescribing. After that, you'll be much reserved in your judgement.Its a real sad situation indeed.
Wal Bada said:There's a document called Bed Head Ticket. It is taken in to custody of the director of the institution, when there's a complaint. The actions will be decided on the content of the BHT. No doctor can give evidence (what ever his expertise) which is contradicting with the BHT. Your accusations are baseless, as there are many cases of compensation paid due to medical negligence, but the most of these are due to "soda bottle reaction" of the patients, where they are provoked and fooled by NGO's which earn through handling such cases. Most of the time, these baseless allegations end as EPIC FAILS.
GMOA only involved doctors in government service. GPs, doctors employed in private sector does not come under GMOA. Once again base less allegation, as some times these experts are foreign doctors.
It does not get exposed often, yes, everybody knows that it is due to lack of facilities. One or two patients die every day because ICU facilities cannot be provided. Even for other facilities, it's the same story.
In practice it's nice. And you deliberately failed to mention that in those countries doctors see only 20 patients per day, and payed heftily even when payments adjusted according to the GNP. Let's see the ground situation. In a district hospital OPD attendance is 100-350. Only 1-3 doctors are available to see the patients. Now that means each doctor sees about 100 patients. OPD is open from 8-12 and 2-4, that is 360 minutes. each patient will get only 3.6 minutes!. Now what is your suggestion? See them as in US/UK and ask the rest to go home and come tomorrow, or see all of them? What is your solution?
You have absolutely NO knowledge in medicine. Even in US/UK it's the same. For pneumonia in every country tentative treatment started until sputum / blood culture and antibiotic sensitivity report is available. Sputum culture costs 1200, and blood culture 1800. You want those investigations to be done in thousands in such a poor country? What is your alternative?
People like you should be kept in an OPD for one day and should be asked to write down, name, age and presenting complaint of all patients in a OPD. Never mind on prescribing. After that, you'll be much reserved in your judgement.
danukapeiris said:ya u r 100%. he is promoting some other hospitals (indirectly). dont know about the medicine and how to respect to the doctors service
Also blog promote karala....SPAM kaleth naa.............!!








