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Why 1 million Indonesians flock to Malaysian hospitals annually

As many as 60 percent of medical tourists stated they had experienced a misdiagnosis at a domestic hospital. This situation forced them look for better and more reliable medical services abroad, a report says.

Kornelius Purba (The Jakarta Post)
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Penang, Malaysia
Sat, August 10, 2024 Published on Aug. 9, 2024 Published on 2024-08-09T14:15:02+07:00

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Why 1 million Indonesians flock to Malaysian hospitals annually With all heart: A cardiologist performs an echocardiography test during the launch of the cardiovascular center at the Metropolitan Medical Center Hospital in South Jakarta on Jan. 23, 2020. (Tribunnews/Jeprima)

W

hile waiting for an appointment with an orthopedic doctor in a Penang hospital in Malaysia with my family last week, I read last year's edition of The Jakarta Post, which quoted President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo complaining that around 2 million Indonesians make overseas medical trips every year, including 1 million to Malaysia and 750,000 to Singapore. This costs the country Rp 165 trillion (US$10.6 billion) in capital outflows.

The President said there were two main reasons for the outbound flow: there is a chronic shortage of medical specialists and the physical infrastructure for healthcare delivery is poor.

I don't want to get into a debate with the President. Even the Indonesian Medical Association (IDI) say the country’s doctors are just as good as foreign doctors in Malaysia or Singapore. That said, the reasons for going abroad for medical treatment should be more substantial than what the President and Indonesian doctors have said.

I went to Penang to accompany my son, who hadn't improved at all after having pinched nerve surgery last month by a celebrity orthopedic surgeon at a private hospital in Jakarta. The surgeon told him he'd be back to normal in no time, but he was still in pain despite the surgery, which is something he never imagined before.

In 2010, I also took my wife to this island to replace a rod that had been implanted in her back by a devout Indonesian doctor nine years before. A CT scan here found that the rod had moved from its original position despite a lifetime guarantee from the Indonesian surgeon.

Malaysian orthopedic surgeon Oh Kim-Soon told my wife that the rod had moved from its original position, which was causing her severe pain. The second surgery in Penang was a big step forward for my wife in terms of managing her pain, although she was still very unlikely to be able to walk as she wished. She's been in a wheelchair for 23 years, but now she's ready to get back on her feet.

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An Indonesian patient sitting next to me said he was hoping that our country would soon allow foreign doctors to operate in Indonesia. He was perplexed as to why despite the fact that the House of Representatives had passed the Health Law, which allows foreign medical specialists to practice in the country, the IDI and many Indonesian doctors were against the liberalization of the health sector.

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