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General Doctor Cafe in Hongdae-- a "clinic cafe"

 
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jdog2050



Joined: 17 Dec 2006

PostPosted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 5:42 pm    Post subject: General Doctor Cafe in Hongdae-- a "clinic cafe" Reply with quote

http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2915966

Pretty cool idea honestly...creating a GP office that's also a cafe; Even western countries could use better client-doctor relationships.

Only thing is, I don't know about having cats around. People could be allergic.
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Bibbitybop



Joined: 22 Feb 2006
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 5:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

This couple spoke at TedX Seoul last semester and were two of the most interesting Korean presenters that day.
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David Lee Roth



Joined: 24 Dec 2009
Location: Towering, waiting to pounce!

PostPosted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 11:45 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Very cool, but I don't agree with having cats around, as a lot of people are allergic to them.
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crossmr



Joined: 22 Nov 2008
Location: Hwayangdong, Seoul

PostPosted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 4:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
In Korea, patients get the �one minute treatment,� in which patients wait for an hour or more and see their doctor for only a minute, even if they have questions.

Really? I've gone to international clinics and regular clinics and I've never waited more than a few minutes and never been rushed out.
This sounds more like a description of Canada than Korea.
In Canada if you even dared talk about a second problem the doc would get short with you, and the secretary wouldn't let you book long appointments to talk about multiple problems. You could book a physical once a year. Where you could discuss "multiple issues".
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David Lee Roth



Joined: 24 Dec 2009
Location: Towering, waiting to pounce!

PostPosted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 4:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Actually, the reality in BOTH Korea and Canada is you will often have to wait an hour or longer but only get to the see the doctor for a few minutes. Korean doctors typically see 4-5 times the patients North American doctors do because fees here are about 1/5 what they are back home. Working out the math, doctors here make about the same as back home but they have to see 5 times the patients. At my clinic, my boss sees 60-80 patients in a 3-hour clinic session.

On the other hand, as a whitey here I've enjoyed the privilege of jumping the queue at clinics (e.g., Seoul National University Hospital).
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crossmr



Joined: 22 Nov 2008
Location: Hwayangdong, Seoul

PostPosted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 5:00 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

David Lee Roth wrote:
Actually, the reality in BOTH Korea and Canada is you will often have to wait an hour or longer but only get to the see the doctor for a few minutes. Korean doctors typically see 4-5 times the patients North American doctors do because fees here are about 1/5 what they are back home. Working out the math, doctors here make about the same as back home but they have to see 5 times the patients. At my clinic, my boss sees 60-80 patients in a 3-hour clinic session.

On the other hand, as a whitey here I've enjoyed the privilege of jumping the queue at clinics (e.g., Seoul National University Hospital).


In 2 years and about a dozen appointments between SNU and local small clinics, with or without an appointment I've never waited more than about 10-15 minutes.
At least half of those I've walked right in.
The only time I've ever walked right into a doctor in Canada is when I'm the first appointment of the day, which is near impossible to get.
Without an appointment I'm waiting at least 2+ hours to get in at a clinic in Canada. During the day more than likely 4+. I've only walked right in once in a clinic, it was 3 am. Maybe at the big hospitals the lines are long, but there are clinics everywhere here.
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Bibbitybop



Joined: 22 Feb 2006
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 5:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

David Lee Roth wrote:
Very cool, but I don't agree with having cats around, as a lot of people are allergic to them.


Then don't go to this particular doctor. Smile
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Ukon



Joined: 29 Jan 2008

PostPosted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 5:39 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

David Lee Roth wrote:
Actually, the reality in BOTH Korea and Canada is you will often have to wait an hour or longer but only get to the see the doctor for a few minutes. Korean doctors typically see 4-5 times the patients North American doctors do because fees here are about 1/5 what they are back home. Working out the math, doctors here make about the same as back home but they have to see 5 times the patients. At my clinic, my boss sees 60-80 patients in a 3-hour clinic session.

On the other hand, as a whitey here I've enjoyed the privilege of jumping the queue at clinics (e.g., Seoul National University Hospital).


Your local clinic sucks.....I visit a doctor who's famous and never had to wait longer than 20 minutes.
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cdninkorea



Joined: 27 Jan 2006
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 6:57 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

crossmr wrote:
In 2 years and about a dozen appointments between SNU and local small clinics, with or without an appointment I've never waited more than about 10-15 minutes.
At least half of those I've walked right in.
The only time I've ever walked right into a doctor in Canada is when I'm the first appointment of the day, which is near impossible to get.
Without an appointment I'm waiting at least 2+ hours to get in at a clinic in Canada.


Seconded. I've never, not even once, had to wait more than 20 minutes to see a doctor in Korea. I've been here almost 5 years and have been to doctors quite a bit, sometimes without appointments. I'm much happier with my healthcare experiences in Korea than in Canada.
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David Lee Roth



Joined: 24 Dec 2009
Location: Towering, waiting to pounce!

PostPosted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 10:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Crossmr, sounds to me like you and I have had different experiences both here and back home. Wow! Whoda thunk two people could have different experiences?! My experiences in Korea, as far as waiting times go, have been generally good: in the larger, busier clinics like SNU International Clinic, I've only waited 20-30, but I jumped the queue because I was a foreigner; when I've gone to the much smaller International Clinic at Soonchunhyang Hospital, I've typically waited 10-15 minutes because there are only 2 or 3 people ahead of me. In our very busy clinic, KOREANS wait 30 minutes. I grew up in Western Canada in medium-sized urban centers where the waiting times were 30-45 minutes tops. I believe that a Korean in the Korean medical care system waits a little less than a Canadian in the Canadian system when seeing a GP. To see a specialist, I believe the Canadian system is much worse. For example, my diabetic friend had to wait 6 months to see an endocrinologist. As I said in my previous post, doctors here have to see many more patients to earn the same amount of money. Being a healthcare professional, I would choose the system back home. Being a patient, I would choose the Korean system.

Ukon, I don't work in a local clinic. It's a specialist clinic in a major Seoul hospital. The average wait for our patients is 30 mins, an improvement since we recently switched to electronic medical records. If your doc is really THAT famous, I imagine he/she must be quite busy so: 1) you would have to wait some time to see him 2) you have the privilege of jumping the queue; or 3) he is an extremely "efficient" doctor and is able to see all of the patients in front of you, lickety-split.

I'm happy to hear you are all receiving excellent, prompt treatment.
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crossmr



Joined: 22 Nov 2008
Location: Hwayangdong, Seoul

PostPosted: Fri Mar 26, 2010 12:41 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

David Lee Roth wrote:
Crossmr, sounds to me like you and I have had different experiences both here and back home. Wow! Whoda thunk two people could have different experiences?!


And one of those people could be having a non-typical experience. Based on the media, I'd say that is you. I don't know how long you've been gone, but most stories about healthcare in Canada involve ridiculous wait times.
I grew up in the east, spent the odd year there as an adult but most of my adult years were in the west, and there was very little difference between them. Wait times were ridiculous everywhere. Appointment or no appointment.
Hospital, clinic, doctors office, didn't matter.
They were far and above what exists here, and it would seem several others agree with that, which would again point to your non-typical experience.
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Mr. BlackCat



Joined: 30 Nov 2005
Location: Insert witty remark HERE

PostPosted: Fri Mar 26, 2010 12:55 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

crossmr wrote:
David Lee Roth wrote:
Actually, the reality in BOTH Korea and Canada is you will often have to wait an hour or longer but only get to the see the doctor for a few minutes. Korean doctors typically see 4-5 times the patients North American doctors do because fees here are about 1/5 what they are back home. Working out the math, doctors here make about the same as back home but they have to see 5 times the patients. At my clinic, my boss sees 60-80 patients in a 3-hour clinic session.

On the other hand, as a whitey here I've enjoyed the privilege of jumping the queue at clinics (e.g., Seoul National University Hospital).


In 2 years and about a dozen appointments between SNU and local small clinics, with or without an appointment I've never waited more than about 10-15 minutes.
At least half of those I've walked right in.
The only time I've ever walked right into a doctor in Canada is when I'm the first appointment of the day, which is near impossible to get.
Without an appointment I'm waiting at least 2+ hours to get in at a clinic in Canada. During the day more than likely 4+. I've only walked right in once in a clinic, it was 3 am. Maybe at the big hospitals the lines are long, but there are clinics everywhere here.


I'm from Canada, too, and have never had the experiences you have written about in several cities that I've lived in. Not only that, but I am able to book an apointment with my GP any time I want to ask questions and deal with specific problems, not once a year like you said. Yes, often there is a wait of at least a week if it's not urgent but when it is I'm able to see him the day of. I'm not saying you haven't gone through what you have, I just mean that in the face of different experiences you tend to respond with denials, generalizations and panicked defences. This thread was about a possible clinic in Korea and you managed to turn it into some rant against Canadian health care (which of course has problems, but I just don't see the relevance). I think Rupurt Murdoch would be proud of you.
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David Lee Roth



Joined: 24 Dec 2009
Location: Towering, waiting to pounce!

PostPosted: Fri Mar 26, 2010 1:19 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Crossmr, you may indeed be right that my experiences are atypical. However, I see Mr. Black Cat has had generally good experiences with the Canadian healthcare system, as well. Upon quick perusal of PubMed, I was unable to find Canadian or Korean studies, but I did find one American study (2007).

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1810532/

This nationwide study found nearly 40% of patients waited less than 15 minutes, and nearly 80% waited less than 30 mins. The study appears sound and the sample size adequate (n~5000). Like I said, as a patient I would choose Korea, but I think there are pros and cons to both systems. My advice to all is be a wise consumer.

BTW, your online moniker seems quite appropriate.
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crossmr



Joined: 22 Nov 2008
Location: Hwayangdong, Seoul

PostPosted: Fri Mar 26, 2010 1:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Mr. BlackCat wrote:

I'm from Canada, too, and have never had the experiences you have written about in several cities that I've lived in. Not only that, but I am able to book an apointment with my GP any time I want to ask questions and deal with specific problems, not once a year like you said. Yes, often there is a wait of at least a week if it's not urgent but when it is I'm able to see him the day of. I'm not saying you haven't gone through what you have, I just mean that in the face of different experiences you tend to respond with denials, generalizations and panicked defences. This thread was about a possible clinic in Korea and you managed to turn it into some rant against Canadian health care (which of course has problems, but I just don't see the relevance). I think Rupurt Murdoch would be proud of you.


I was quoting something out of the article which seemed out of place. This thread was about the article.
That's why it was linked I assume.
It wasn't a rant against Canadian healthcare, it was initially just a comment on something that I hadn't experienced it and found the statement to be strange. Anyone I've talked to about it has had similar experiences to me. After that was questioned, I explained my full experience in detail both my personal experience and the things I'd read in the media.There is nothing "panicked" about that.

I can book an appointment any time to talk to my GP, but my GP and many doctors (again covered in the media) are now limiting patients to discussing a single issue to try and curb wait times, but doctors will only allow you to discuss multiple issues at once during a physical which you can only book once a year and there is a several month wait to book. (Calgary Health Region).

In the east, other than first of the morning appointments, I've never waited less than 40 minutes, with the average being over an hour.
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Mr. BlackCat



Joined: 30 Nov 2005
Location: Insert witty remark HERE

PostPosted: Mon Mar 29, 2010 3:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

crossmr wrote:
Mr. BlackCat wrote:

I'm from Canada, too, and have never had the experiences you have written about in several cities that I've lived in. Not only that, but I am able to book an apointment with my GP any time I want to ask questions and deal with specific problems, not once a year like you said. Yes, often there is a wait of at least a week if it's not urgent but when it is I'm able to see him the day of. I'm not saying you haven't gone through what you have, I just mean that in the face of different experiences you tend to respond with denials, generalizations and panicked defences. This thread was about a possible clinic in Korea and you managed to turn it into some rant against Canadian health care (which of course has problems, but I just don't see the relevance). I think Rupurt Murdoch would be proud of you.


I was quoting something out of the article which seemed out of place. This thread was about the article.
That's why it was linked I assume.
It wasn't a rant against Canadian healthcare, it was initially just a comment on something that I hadn't experienced it and found the statement to be strange. Anyone I've talked to about it has had similar experiences to me. After that was questioned, I explained my full experience in detail both my personal experience and the things I'd read in the media.There is nothing "panicked" about that.

I can book an appointment any time to talk to my GP, but my GP and many doctors (again covered in the media) are now limiting patients to discussing a single issue to try and curb wait times, but doctors will only allow you to discuss multiple issues at once during a physical which you can only book once a year and there is a several month wait to book. (Calgary Health Region).

In the east, other than first of the morning appointments, I've never waited less than 40 minutes, with the average being over an hour.


And I say that's great (or bad, I guess) that you've had that experience. I haven't. Others haven't. Yet you say your experiences are indicative of the Canadian health care system in whole. It is not. You say it's true because the media says so. Hence my Fox News comment. In this last post you say it is true of the Calgery region. Fine, say so. Don't say it's true of all of Canada as you did in your first few posts (and in other threads).
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