People think because we are asians we are not good. But the origin of n95 mask was invented by a local doctor from penang.
The ignorant ones think that, smart people don’t. You will always find the people with less knowledge the most ignorant and less traveled. Malaysia and asians are awesome!!
@@chibimeee It's Wu Lien Teh. Also, he designed the Wu mask, a precursor of N95, not the current N95 itself.
I am a Malaysian stayed in Australia for 5 years and honestly the Healthcare here are very bad...in Australia the GP close at 5pm and if you feel sick at night time then you have to go to Hospital... and worst thing you have to wait for hours just to see a doctor to examine you. I had been admitted in Sydney Hospital twice for my miscarriage case and i have to stay in Hospital for 4 days just to clean up my womb... The Healthcare system in Australia are very slow and ridiculous. I'm glad that now I'm back in Malaysia... So don't think that Western countries Healthcare are good or better then Asian countries... I'm really proud of Malaysia Healthcare system.
Sorry to hear about your medical situation. I totally understand the frustration you must have went through and I'm glad you're ok here in Malaysia, in terms of healthcare. Thanks for watching and leaving an insightful comment that can help us all!
I was also a student in 2005 when I need to be rushed to emergency department as I have injuries while playing football and unable to stand. Went to Modbury Hospital in suburb area in Adelaide.. Waited for 5 hours.. Then doctor just see me and give medications and discharge me.. Without xrays or any other investigations! I was in pain going back..
The next thing is 2 weeks later, the bill came.. AUD470 for the examination and medications! Thankfully I had the overseas insurance cover (OSHC)
I am from Sydney and have lived in Malaysia and agree. Health system in Malaysia is very good compared to Australia which has going down hill since. I once waited in ER for 4 hours for a cut to my elbow to the bone.
I moved to Sydney for more than 10years and was chairside assistant of Malaysia GP before. The whole system here is ridiculous and we literally pay the private health insurance and Medicare levy for nothing but supporting other individual. Although I don’t mind supporting the community but I don’t earn enough to pay ad-hoc medical fees as well sometimes for a simple scan or specialist. To reduce the cost, I even need to plan my financial well in advance before seeing them or schedule my appointment sparingly so I don’t need to fork out this unexpected expenses for the month.
Forgot to mention I got misdiagnosed or prescribed medicine that too strong for the symptoms for many times
I totally concur with what he's saying. As a full-time traveler, Kuala Lumpur is my main healthcare location. I go there annually for a very comprehensive health screening (so much more extensive than any physical I've ever gotten in the US) for just $300 USD. Last year I had surgery at Prince Court Medical Centre, a private hospital in KL, including staying in the hospital for several nights and it was an amazing experience. Last month when I was there I had a simple teeth cleaning and even that was superior to what I get in the US. It's easy to understand why medical tourism is so big in Malaysia. They know what they're doing!
I want to be full time traveller, can you advice me, do you pay any insurance? Or just go to Kuala Lumpur to have checks and treatments? If so the biggest bill you pay there was ... ?
Thanks Jim for your awesome comment! I also agree with this, I get a full health screening like you described and it's amazing, I'd never gotten anything close to that in Australia. I had to pay hundreds of dollars to get my testosterone checked (the doctor wouldn't do it) when in Malaysia is was included in the full screening. Same with dental, was a bit nervous but it blows Australia away. I love what you're doing by the way - keep it up Jim and safe travels!
Hopefully Jim can give his perspective as he's been to more countries than me but I'd recommend a general travel insurance/digital nomad policy just in case you're covered wherever you are. Using KL as a base is a great idea for checkups & I agree the cost for that is up to $300 USD - so that's probably your largest potential cost outside of insurance. Keep up the travels!!
@@AlmasAdventures Great to hear you want to be a full-time traveler. It's quite the life! Jack mentions getting travel insurance or a digital nomad insurance policy. That could provide you with some peace of mind when traveling. However, I generally don't use travel insurance for any medical expenses I have while traveling since it is usually inexpensive enough to just pay out of pocket. My only big expense was my surgery last year in KL. That cost $6k USD for the surgery, 5 nights in a private room at Prince Court Medical Centre, etc. At the time, I had travel insurance, but they wouldn't pay anything for the surgery because I have health insurance in the US (Blue Cross). They said I would need to go that route. In theory, Blue Cross should have covered some of the cost for the surgery, but the process of making a claim was so convoluted and required so much difficult to obtain supporting documentation that I didn't bother with it. That surgery was an unusual circumstance. For minor medical issues just paying out of pocket is the way to go in most countries. For instance, the awesome teeth cleaning I had in KL cost $65 USD and was a bargain in my opinion. Do you have insurance in your home country that could cover you abroad? If not, travel insurance could give you some peace of mind, but as I said, you probably will find that most medical issues that pop up can be reasonably dealt with by paying out of pocket. Hope this helps!
@@nomadjim tanks for responses, I go as you go, pay buy service done ✅👍 thanks 🙏 👍✔️💗
#AlmasAdventures
Malaysia is one of the best Medical Service & Facilities in the world.
I am a blood donor here in Malaysia. I have 7 elective surgeries and paid nothing. Blood donors get free healthcare over here.
Respect! That's excellent, thank you for doing that and it's great to hear you're treated well here.
Here in Malaysia, the more your donate your blood, you will have more benefit, even get free first class ward in government hospital.
You're doing good. I've considered being a regular blood donor but I just couldn't handle the needle 😂
I used to donate blood fairly regularly when I was in uni but since graduating I haven't had any opportunity to donate blood. How does one continue donating blood outside of blood drives?
@@hollyleafwell2118I regularly went to Pusat Darah Negara, latest was last week. The service is better there. They open on weekends too
I just got my spm result and planning to be a doctor soon! Wish me luck!
Congratulations! May your wish come through and please be a good doctor...
After being gone to UK for studies, I came home appreciating the healthcare system we have here.
I came back from the UK appreciating everything in Malaysia.
My father in law was admitted to a govt hosp due to pneumonia.
The total bill is rm616. But he only paid rm16 . The remaining rm600 is subsidised by the govt.
As a Malaysian I used to study in the UK and worked in the US, the biggest anxiety that I had was related to health. Just the thought of myself and my family members falling sick is enough to keep me awake at night, thinking about the crappy system they have there. Thank god I'm back in Malaysia now, gave me a peace of mind.
Same position here. Unfortunately, with age my health deteriorated (not that seriously) but I would get food poisonings that require IV drips. The NHS doctors would never give you a drip until a last resort and by then you're already completely dehydrated. The worst time was the doctor literally told me I needed a minor surgery but told me the operation date was 1.5 months away... That was the last straw for me. I packed up my bags and came back home, not worth risking my health. Prospects back home are just as good, despite losing out on GBP pay.
US is scary. UK is okay. But then in the UK, only if you are VERY sick will they see you in the hospital. NHS health centres are okay... I guess...for minor health issues. I'm glad I'm back in Malaysia :)
Interesting insights, thank you for sharing & glad you're doing ok now. Best of luck for your future.
After watching this video I guess the system in Malaysia is similar with in Indonesia, and thank you for the comment, you convinced me to just go back to Indonesia after finishing my PhD here in The US.
I am a Malaysian done my Total Knee Replacement at the General Hospital in Kuala Lumpur ,done both knees ,each knee cost me rm10,000 only using robotic surgery and plus hospital bill rm5,000 ,overall rm15,000 only and they are the best doctors ,best nurses .for Malaysian the healtcare is cheap if you go to goverment clinics or hospital ,just rm5 see the doctors and medications ...i am senior citizen so its free for me for consultations and medications .Yes few hours of waiting but its ok .just calculate ringgit to Aussie dollar or US Dollar .We are lucky to be Malaysian and proud to have the best doctors .
Wow! That is great, I'm glad you got what you needed at a reasonable price. Thanks for watching & sharing your experience 🙏
Western healthcare such as in US sucks big time. I'm a Malaysian and currently relocated to US for work. The healthcare system is so confusing and expensive. There is this deductible you have to pay out of your pocket before the full coverage kicks in. This is the worst healthcare system i've ever experience in my life. Is not just the money, getting GP is another nightmare. The appointment take days and some GP doesn't take new patient or walk-in patient. US healthcare is a damn fxxk up system.
100000000% accurate and getting worse. I know, Norma and raised in the U.S. and will be living in Thailand, Malaysia or Vietnam 9mos. Out of the year when I retire in 2yrs
@@byteme9718she never said she expect that. But then, ask any American and see if they think differently.
@@byteme9718of course this person went to private hospitals not begging for citizens treatment but it still suck. What do you think🤨
I love Malaysia! ^_^ So grateful to be Malaysian... Jagalah negara ini elok-elok wahai pemimpin semua.
Info. Doctors in Malaysia not only studied overseas but local universities also produces so much better medical professionals.
Thanks for your comment and insights. Yes I hear the local universities are great, I hope they get more global recognition and we can have more Malaysian doctors in Australia!
I think Jack is referring to private hospitals, not public healthcare. The doctors in private clinics are without any exception all educated abroad in Australia, UK and USA.
@@EGO0808
Nah.
Many of my friends graduated locally and working with private clinics and hospitals after finishing their tenure in govt hospitals.
@@GTestuser any idea how selective Prince Court is when it comes to hiring specialists? I guess with ‘many’ of your friends working in private hospitals, you know you’re just making things up eh?
@@EGO0808
Aiyo Prince Court not the only private hospital in Malaysia laa.
Public and private local medical universities are much better than overseas universities with 3rd world practices smh.
My fiancé and I visited Kuala Lumpur for the first time this past April, had an appointment with an allergen specialist at Gleneagles Medical Centre. We booked the appointment online a couple weeks prior to arriving. When we got there, a short 1-page form had to be completed and patient exam started within 5 minutes. Paid out of pocket for this, just under $300 USD for the consultation/exam along with 90 days of meds which were provided before we left (no trip to a pharmacy). Very good experience and the allergy issues were vastly improved within a few weeks.
Amazing! Thanks for watching and sharing your nice experience. I hope you're doing great now.
Can't agree more. I got into accident and had multiple fractures on my leg, was admitted to Gleneagles Penang. The only thing I needed to do was to hand them my IC, put down my signature, and that's it, it almost felt like the whole system is run by a bot! Went thru surgery, had multiple X-rays and scans, daily physio sessions, stayed in the hotel-like private room for 3 weeks (and get to select your favourite food from the daily menu!!), hired hospital's private vehicle accompanied by a nurse to make police report of the accident at the police station etc... The total bill of AUD22k, all covered by my private insurance except for AUD150 (which includes registration and miscellaneous which were not covered, paid for by credit card upon discharge). All these happened at the back end and my only job was to focus on receiving the right treatments during my unfortunate little "staycation"😂 it was only then I realised Malaysia has one of the best yet most affordable healthcare systems in the world 😊
Hi Jack! Glad to hear that you've great experience healthcare here in Malaysia.
As public healthcare worker myself, all these great healthcare in Malaysia happened at the expense of our healthcare workers (HCWs). They're the backbone, one of the best healthcare in the world. We just need better system to appreciate our HCWs more. A lot of young generations HCWs already resigned from public service and migrated to other parts of the world.
Whatever we have today in Malaysia might not be sustainable for long. Public healthcare system at the brink of collapse. Waiting for new reform announcement by Health Minister soon.
I wish everyone all the best. Let's appreciate each other & stay strong to all HCW comrades! 💪🏻
Thanks for sharing and I appreciate everything you do. Actually I wanted to interview a healthcare worker as research for this video but no one reached out. If you're willing to be interviewed in a video, please feel free to send me an email or contact me on socials. Cheers mate!
I am glad to see this video from a foreigner's point of view. I am a Malaysian. I know the healthcare standard in Malaysia is good from my own experience and comparing with what I heard from friends in the UK long time ago. We have family members work as specialist doctor in Malaysia and in Australia, so we compare notes. Better quality but cheaper.
My sister is a Neuro specialist have own centre. Every month a lot of foreigners just fly here for a week or months to have treatment here… yes… Malaysia famous about affordable and good medical here too.
@@hammerfall6666 40 country and above…. Including china, US, Australia, India, England etc….
Amazing insight! I can see why, thanks for your comment and for her service.
I'm a Malaysian living in Japan and their healthcare system is quite similar to Australia when you mentioned about the consultation being very long and it's so time consuming that I have to fill in the forms and wait for a very long time to see the doctor, and then wait again (usually for a very long time) to receive prescription at the pharmacy. Not to mention their painkiller is not strong at all. For heaven's sake I just want to quickly go home and get my medicine already. In Japan there's just too much unnecessary paperwork. It's really annoying and I miss healthcare back home 😭
That is a really interesting insight! I've heard Japan is very bureaucratic so it doesn't surprise me. You'd think so-called 'advanced' countries would figure out healthcare as a priority - let's hope it improves.
In Malaysia for complicated cases the private hospitals even will ask the patients to refer to government hosp because our government hosp is more complete with advance technology and reliable specialist
Depends on the private hospital you are with. If it is a big, well equipped one eg SJMC, they can do most operations. Also depends on the patient's financial situation. Some families cannot afford to pay the fees charged by private hospitals so they asked to be referred to public hospitals which is tax payers funded
And probably these private hospitals don't want to risk a patient dying on their beds 😅! That's why I prefer the government hospital in Malaysia!
@@paulinelee8915 its the same. None of these private beats GH when comes to speciality and equipment. The only benefit is the extra attentiveness if they have that department covered.
“Third World” with empathy, dignity and humility
“First World” with impunity, money and artillery
Spend on genocidal kills
No remorse, no feels only ills
Pls rise with all good wills..
@@shafinaz.s9884 You're not very bright are you? Look at where most conflict exists. Thanks for appearing to agree Malaysia is third world.
Yes, Malaysia is a top destination for those interested in medical tourism. This vlog further complements the point.
Malaysia has one of the best if not the best public and private healthcare in the world. TQ
As a malaysian living in Australia for nearly 10 years now, I felt the same way and tbh the healthcare in Australia is not really efficient and quite pricey. From my personal experience, I have to book an appointment from a GP to get referral and then book another appointment to get the ultrasound scan from a specialist. It can take up to 1 month for a simple regular scan, such a waste of time plus it costs out of pocket fee even with Medicare. In Malaysia, I could get all the necessary check up within a day and no booking required. I rather choose to go back to Malaysia annually and have a comprehensive body check up afterall.
Thanks for sharing Mindy. I completely agree and Australia can do a lot to improve. Let's hope it does! I also do the comprehensive check up here every year and it's awesome. Appreciate your insights!
I love that our pharmacy here in Malaysia is also our 2nd best alternative to GP. We can get medication by consulting the pharmacist! Even the Singaporean flock to Johor to buy medication because not only its cheaper, most generic medication (made in Malaysia) are as effective as those branded medications in the market.
Thank you for your videos. As a Malaysian, we don't go with the insurance. Everything is free for us. The public hospitals are as good as the privates except there are more crowds in the public's.
My 10-year-old nephew had heart surgery in 2000 and it cost nothing. The bill shows RM30,000.00++, but the government pays for everything including the cost of his mother's food and lodging with him during the whole thing. His father got to stay in an apartment nearby cause they are from outstation, which also pays nothing. Thank you, Malaysia. 😀
My friend had polycystic kidneys, did transplant in GH and all done rm500 for surgery and lifetime meds is free after 60
I gave 5 star for Malaysia medical care because everyone is right they're good and have a heart❤️ 😊
No matter what... as I always preached....You will never get any land such as MALAYSIA in the world! Truly blessed as a Malaysian...we must strive to be the BEST in all, not only Heath care! Thank you for your honesty and review, Jack! Appreciate it!
Most of what you said about Malaysia's health care system is spot on. I am Malaysian.Public hospitals in Malaysia as expected are sought after, being very affordable because it is taxpayer funded. The waiting time to see a GP can be long ( hours). To get to see a specialist you have to be referred to by the GP. The waiting time to see a specialist can be weeks or months. So those who can afford will get appointment to a private hospital ( there are so many good ones to choose from) where you are attended to promptly . You can book a specialist straight on. All procedures and medications are dispensed in house . No hassle. If you have medical insurance, just let the registration counter personnel your have your name, your IC number ( for Malaysians) and the insurance company you are with. The hospital will liaise with the said insurance company and let you know later if your claim is approved. Simple and straight forward
Malaysia is one of the best healthcare in the world. Private hospital can be mistaken as hotel
Thanks Jack! Of all of the travel vids I have subscribed to, yours is one of the most thorough of covering all the bases. Much appreciated!
Malaysia not only has the best food but the best healthcare, the best people/culture and the best panorama/nature. 🤭
Malaysians should be grateful for born in this blessing country! 🇲🇾❤️❤️
@nd the Aussies🇦🇺🇦🇺 Loved to call Others Third world!!
Now Who’s the Truly - THIRD World!!
Yeah anyone calling certain countries third world is usually misinformed/ignorant
AMEN🙏🙏 - Australia, known as Obese oinkssies🐽🐷 are a bunch of Convicts criminals CROOKS anywayy!! NOTHING GOOD coming out from this COuntry!!
i, worked as a Masseur in Perth.
The No. of client LEFT without Paying.....are Mostly 100% Local_british convicts AUSSIE!!
@@GABRIELLIM-oz3sg I’m curious !! After the massage parlour experience where a client left without paying, won’t you consider getting people to pay before they start the massage? 😂
I have a good friend who owns a massage parlour in Melbourne, and she has never had a single client leave without paying.”
as a malaysian i much prefer the public govt owned hospitals to private....not only becos its free but the service is excellent nn the expertise of the doctors n specialist are undeniablly great
to some extend, due to the food diversity, we have a lot of good doctors too. As we know, diseases more often than not are coming from what we consume.
Take a rest & get well soon. Nice to know U've experienced good healthcare in Msia.
What about government hospital in Australia. Are they better than Malaysia.
Here we pay RM 1 to see a doc at at Gov Clinic. If we to semi Gov hospital like University Malaya, it will cost RM 5. Tooth feeling, cleaning will be RM 2. If these docs (at the clinic require us to see a specialist at a Gov Hospital, they will produce a referral letter. With the referral letter, we can make an appointment to see a specialist at the nearest hospital and it will be like a few months (1-3 mths) for your appointment. However If there is an emergency situation whilst waiting for the appointment, then we can just go straight to an Emergency Unit at the hospital.
Well, those perks are for local, i assume, which indoubt he experienced it
@@salplayer9198
Malaysia price for Government Clinics or Hospital
Normal Patient
Local : USD 0.25
Foreigner : USD 10
Hi there, thanks for your comment - that is great insight!
I would say the public/government hospitals in Australia are similar to Malaysia (not better).
GP's are usually free but medication is NOT. The wait time to see a specialist is very long, as if you need an operation, also very long. Basically the Australian government wants everyone on private health insurance even though it's not a good deal. The medicare levy (tax) is 2% of income - so actually we're paying quite a lot for a generally not great government service.
@@JackAlderton medicine is just USD 0.50 in malaysia Government
Specialist appointment 2 months,
Thank you so much for sharing! This is so helpful
Glad you got value from it Mariah! Thanks for watching & feel free to let me know what you want to see next.
Malaysia's private healthcare are regulated so that more people can afford them. This will reduce the burden on public hospitals so that the lower income group can have access to free healthcare. Severe and critical cases sometimes do get transferred to the public hospitals so that if it doesn't turn out well, it doesn't appear in the private hospital's record. 🤭
Interesting! Thanks for watching and sharing your insights. Do you work in the healthcare system here?
Thanks for the sharing. Very informative. Looking forward to more healthcare topics here.
No worries, look forward to making more. Is there any specific topic you'd like me to talk about?
Hmmm…would love to see ur sharing abt work culture, stress level, or a typical working day etcs. But anything from ur life experience is also as great. U have great insight n perspective. -)
I'm totally agree 👍 in what you are saying We been staying in Australia and now we are come back to stay in our hometown Malaysia
Thanks Lily! Appreciate your insights. I hope you had some good times in Australia and welcome back to Malaysia.
Another info. Why Malaysia provides best medical treatment be at government hospitals or private premises? They strictly follow the 'text books'. Both are monitored very stritly by Ministry of Health. Yet Malaysians to pay RM5 to see medical doctors at governmenthospitals.
Heyo! I'm a Malaysian, living in Uk for 6yrs and moved to Sydney for a decade! In contrast to western healthcare system to asian, its incomparable in terms of convenience and emergency factor. Long time ago, a housemate called for an ambulance and later received a hefty bill 😅for that emergency services! Healthcare shock!!
Geez! Thanks for sharing your experience. Hope you enjoyed Sydney (at least its best parts) and now the UK.
Just wanted to share, I'm Malaysian and last April, my auntie admitted to gov hospital because of her heart and blood pressure. She stayed about 5 days and extra care from the docs and nurses because her bed in front of the nurses station, later after her health are under control, not high risk only then she was transferred to another area. And after discharge and got her medication, the total was only RM60+, she didn't have any insurance and she stayed for 5 days, oh yeah and they also did some tests on her, x-rays and one test which I cannot remember. So, I'm thankful with our healthcare. Although the waiting time to see the doc and picking up meds were a bit longer but that's fine because we just had to pay for that amount and 0 for meds. Just wanna share, don't hesitate to go to gov hospital if you don't have much budget like my auntie.
Thanks for sharing your experience, that's great! And hope she's doing well now.
I used to live in the US. Finding a GP is a nightmare there. Now, I'm back in Malaysia, GP is everywhere. Sometimes I visit government clinics and you only pay 1 Ringgit (USD 24 cents 😅) to see the doctor and medicine, x ray, blood & urine test, heart ultrasound are all completely free. I have high blood pressure so I have these tests every few months and get my prescription for high BP all free. I saw some patients get a full bag of different types of medicine for free...like a lot 😅
That's true if you're a citizen and opt to go to government hospitals. But you need to endure the long queue, as govt hospitals are basically hospitals of choice for M40 and B40 groups
Long queues in Australia too unfortunately, seems to be a common theme with government services.
@@tokwanofficial3036 some are not B40 group, they are just too kedekut, you can get free medicine, why pay? 😅
Just like me...2 boxes of diabetic pills, stacks of pill for BP and cholesterol. Like, in a plastic bag after shopping! For FREE . And all the pharmacists, Malays, Chinese, Indians, are very friendly and nice people! 😊😊😊😊
Thanks heaps Jack for the information on health care. I visit Malaysia often and have used the GPs, you're not wrong on the cost. Much more affordable.
No worries Will, thanks for your insight and confirming my thoughts. See you around!
The government clinics and hospitals are great too. They’re very underrated.
I hope our Malaysian healthcare workers get the recognition they deserve from the citizens. And of course better perks, otherwise it is heartbreaking to see them leaving to serve in other countries.
I have been going to a government clinic in Shah Alam since 2023. I am given medical checkup every 6 month to see my sugar level, BP , and cholesterol. Every 3 months need to go to the same clinic's pharmacy to restock my medicines. For FREE.
I'm Malaysian! And welcome to Malaysia. Have a good day dude! Love you..❤And absolute pray for you about health and life right here..
Thank you for watching and your kind words! Please do let me know if there are any topics you'd like to see next.
All the best to u bro... Speedy recovery..
The problem is Malaysia is much underrated in many aspects ..
Thank you mate. Feeling ok now. Yes you're right, I want to share more truth - what other aspects would you like me to talk about and share my experiences?
To see a specialist doctor in government hospital is charged rm5 for local
This was a great one, thanks!! Have you done a video about corporate culture in Malaysia?
Thanks for watching! Not yet but that's a good idea. I work for a very international company so I've met a lot of different people from different backgrounds. In general, it's the best corporate culture I've worked for (better than Aus) but it probably doesn't represent the typical Malaysian company - I've heard some not so good stories!
Thank you for sharing your positive healthcare experience in Malaysia! As a Malaysian, it’s wonderful to hear such appreciation for our medical services. Malaysia is indeed known for its affordable and high-quality healthcare, and it's always heartwarming to hear others acknowledge it.
This isn't the first time I've heard praise for our healthcare system and talented doctors. Your kind words will surely encourage more people to consider Malaysia for their medical needs.
Thanks again for highlighting the strengths of our country!
The inventor of the Wu mask, which is the forerunner of today's N95 respirator- was Dr. Wu Lian De, a Malayan physician.
Every word spoken is true and I absolutely agree from experience: in Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore healthcare is superb, top notch, efficient, available at all times and at a fraction of the price in Western countries.
I have been an Australian citizen for 10 years now and prior to that, a Malaysian. Whatever Jack mentioned is all so true. What I hate the most of the health care system in Australia is even if you go to the emergency department, you still have to wait for hours before you get seen. My partner had pneumonia and when we got to the emergency department, we waited 7 hours till dawn before we got past the waiting area. Australia, you should really emulate the Malaysian healthcare system. I, for one, really miss this side of Malaysia and of course, the shopping.😂
Well, i go to my family GP, average waiting time is 2 hours.. I go to my private specialist with appointment atleast 1 week in advance, waiting time nothing less than 1 hour..
I never been to government hospital, but i used to bring my mother in law, need to leave the house at 6am to be there earlier but still have hundreds in front of us, got the number by 8am, standard time is finished by lunch hour.. but with such minimal fee.. what to complaint
Maybe this is the scenario in Klang Valley.
I am not saying bad thing about Malaysia healthcare, but i suppose it is similar in many places.
As for ED, it is really depend on the urgency of your illness, if you have chest pain or accident with life treatening you will be attended immediately...
Thanks for sharing Grace, it's great to have another perspective, particularly from Malaysians who have visited or moved to Australia.
The reason it takes you such a long time to see a specialist in Australia is that in Australia, they take care of the healthcare workers, the number of patients per day are limited. In Malaysia, there is no limitation in the number of patients seen daily, and doctors get overworked frequently.
Look forward to watching it soon.
Thanks Yasin - I would appreciate your insight & feedback as someone who has more knowledge than me. This is my personal (very positive) experience over the last 2 years but I'd always love to learn more.
@@JackAldertonWhat a wonderful video. Yes, in terms of cost and convenience, the medical services in Malaysia is at a very good standard. For the public, Malaysia has a Klinik 1Malaysia that offer RM1 for each consultation with GP that includes all the medicines without limits. Hope that everything keeps you healthy in KL.
Amazing - that is extemely good. I'm super impressed by Malaysian health care and many people back home are surprised to hear that I think it's better. But I believe it's true!
@@JackAlderton Yes, amazing. Hopefully that Malaysia can maintain the good standard practiced in the medical industry for a very long time to come. Thank you for your wonderful video. 😀
@@JackAldertonevery two months the government hospital sent my medication n it's free,I only pay rm6 for the postman
Welcome to my beautiful country Malaysia
The home for Malaysian Malay, Malaysian Chinese, Malaysian Indian, Malaysian Sarawakian and Malaysian Sabahan . Enjoy in our country ❤
Very interesting. I teach strategic healthcare costing in the USA. I would love to use this video and learn more.
Thanks for watching and commenting, yes please do and let me know if there's anything else I can share!
whenevr i travel abroad, i feel like no other country has the most coverage and accesibality to doctor like in Malaysia.
Love your videos ! Ihave actually taken my daughter to Malaysian specialist as we could not obtain care in Australia. 9 month waiting list… totally agree service and care was outstanding ! Which accommodation is that please Jack ?
Woah! Exactly the example I'm thinking of, thanks for sharing & I hope your daughter is going well now. The condo is Setia Sky Residences - I'll be posting a full tour soon.
We're taking back our nephew to Malaysia for treatment - Australia hospital is keeping him since March in hospital with hay wire treatment....we are not happy at all...
😱 I hope he gets the care he needs. Best of luck to you and your nephew.
I'm just glad I can get all of my medication basically for free. God bless our healthcare
many thanks to your honest reactions and recommendation about medical tourism malaysia content and about health care serving along seeking for healthcare, apart from that you peoples should deserve satisfaction rights patients health is priority instead money......
Malaysia has one of the best medical systems in the world. not the fastest but at least the most affordable. Well Done Malaysia
Couldn’t agree more!! I live in Germany, you need to make an appointment before you see your GP. You can walk in, but take hours till you see your GP. When you call, you can hardly get through, when you get the on the phone you hardly get your appointment in the same week. Opening hours are ridiculous. For example 9-12, 2-4, or just appointment patients or 2 emergency hours. You always have to check online. Even when you check online, it doesn’t show the real updated open hours. One good thing the consultation is free. But you have to go to pharmacy to get your prescription. In Germany everyone wants to have something from that one piece piece of cake! Medicine and medical products are very expensive. They deduct so much money from your salary, but still you need to pay a lot for your medicine and medical product. The pharmaceutical industry is totally screwed here. In Malaysia is much more better. GPs and specialists are more accessible. For those who has private insurance or medical card, the efficiency is just incomparable!! Even the government hospitals or clinics are not that slow like here.
Thank you for your opnion regarding our Malaysian Healthcare systems. It it very treu that our GPs are a one stop centre. You get consultations+examinations+genreal investigations, and medicines. Unfortunately past few years there has been calls from certain peoples that GPs should not dispense medicines. It should be left to Pharmacists, just like in Australia. This has nothing to do with healthcare, more to do with business and money. I am glad that you feel that the current system where our GPs can dispense medications is great.
I agreed with u. i studied in Oz 15 years ago, i had experience went to dentist and it took long time to just book for the appointment. And the cost was very expensive. Oz is nice country but healthcare in Malaysia way more convenient.
My specialty came from Australia, and I currently serve my people in Malaysia. Yeah, interesting, right? Thanks for your video!
Im normal Malaysia citizen,I have two major surgery in two years and im paid any cent,it is paid by Government
Hope malaysias healthcare keeps improving. Right now, the goverment is shooting its own leg for creating more problem towards local doctor job security.
I do too Jerry. Can you explain more about what's happening in the government system?
@JackAlderton hai jack, I'm myself practicing in government sector, the issue about the payment, overwork staff, understaff n old facilities. Plus the staffs welfare even worst. But yeah they keep pushing us to give the best for our patient, but not ourself, got my friends got family accident, but he can't go to visit as the head department didt allow it, later that friend quit from this system. Another one, can't take leave when wife in labour room. The point that kkm push n squeeze us that much 😢
@@UmarIzzuddin-sb8kv Hopefully the relevant authority sees your comment and takes it seriously. I have been hearing this quite often. I hate to see Malaysia's good medical service just slip away towards downward spiral because of this. Malaysia high medical service has done goodness to a lots of people from all over the world including to the locals. I pray for improvement for the sake of humanity.
If you're ill in Malaysia for common illness, it's cheap because in government hospital, government covered most of the cost for citizens. You only have to pay Rm1 for doctor or Rm5 for specialist doctor for registration. The other costs are low.
For third class ward it's dirt cheap, in exchange for sharing the room with multiple patients (with blinds). Poor people are covered here, as long as it's not special treatment (special surgery, etc).
Thanks Jack I’m thinking moving to Malaysia
Can you give me an ideas regard health insurance please
No worries. I would find a basic policy that covers major emergencies and hospital stays but I wouldn't worry too much about it otherwise. Of course it depends on your age and situation. I'm with AIA and have also used Allianz - they are both respectable brands I trust.
THAT WHY CERTAIN INDONESIA PREFER TO GO TO MALAYSIA HOSPITAL BETTER THEN THEIR OWN..
I believe that, Malaysia healthcare is very good but I don't know much about Indonesia!
at my residentials area there's this polyclinic who didn't take an advantage towards our locals, for most common flu, cough etc you probably get charge less than RM50, but there's a catch if it's an inflammation which cause weeks to recover, you'll probably ought for more stronger dose at different clinic, still it's a good act by the doctors as he understand on most locals wages which generally low and slightly below average, meanwhile at some well established clinic you might get charged closed to RM90 just for common flu.
For an advanced country, can somebody enlighten me why countries like Australia and US can't figure out a better healthcare system. If they want to save their time and effort, just benchmark some better systems in other '3rd world' countries. Sometimes it is ok to look at someone below you to learn something.
Capitalism.. the Insurance companies and Parmaceuticals company runs the show over there
Because the are happily spending it on wars and weapons instead of using the money to provide better healthcare to it's citizen
I suspect the attitude of Western Supremacy blocks them from venturing away from Western ppl or ppl they think are not their 'allies' or of 'similar values'. If we look at International best practise biasanya they'll mention European countries especially Scandinavian countries are their favorite, Oceania, North America and maybe Singapore/ Japan. Other than that, tak pandang pon, if they do it's so rare...
Most part of what u have mentioned is true especially the cost of insurance. I am a Msian living in Australia n have had 2 knee operations n my gall bladder removed. I do have insurance but unlike what u mentioned I did not have to pay a cent for any of the operation or hospital stays due to the insurance. Over the years I I have had xrays, ct scans, ultrasounds, cortisone injections, mammograms which were all free n didn't need to use my insurance for that and I work full time. I do have to pay for MRI tho.
Thanks for watching and your comment. Wow, I actually didn't know that's possible, I'd love to know how you managed that. As far as I know there is always an excess or out of pocket. Did you do all the scans via medicare bulk billing? The problem with that is I've always found you need to call around and wait a few weeks minimum. Thanks for sharing and hope everything is going well for you now.
Thanks Jack for the very useful video. I share similar experiences about visiting GPs and Specialists in Malaysia.. Overall, healthcare system here is reliable. However, more complex cases/illness will need some effort to find a good and attentive doctor.
You mentioned that you have AIA insurance. That was a bit wiered, since I also have it and it's not a cheap policy by any means. However, I still can't visit specialists or GPs directly under this policy. It's more about hospitalization and what it entails (pre or post) of visitations, investigations and treatments.
Would you mind sharing some more details about your AIA policy? I might use your advice and switch to this policy, since mine's renewal is approaching.
Thanks a lot!
Thanks Ahmed! Appreciate you sharing your insights. Yes to clarify I am on a corporate plan, I tried to search for an equivalent one but I may have got it wrong. It's fair to say that the corporate plan covers more for a lower cost (~900 employees). It really does cover everything up to an annual limit of 100k (I believe), which I will hopefully never get close to. So I probably can't help more than that, but I do think AIA has been the best so far! We used to be with Allianz.
As a Malaysian I agree with you,i will say the service you get from private healthcare will depend on the amount you are paying either by private insurance or from your own pocket.
Being a Malaysian, the public healthcare is very accessible from only RM1.00, and you'll blown away with the medicine and treatment you will get, however the service quality may vary from different public hospitals or public clinics. Thanks for the review
I agree on this
Happen to my family last time
Went to GC for a quick holiday during autumn
My dad need a nebuliser and in OZ it only prescribe by the doctor
Even the inhaler also need prescription
1st not alot of GPs available in available time during our stay
2nd need to go to pharmacy and not many around where our airbnb is.
Best thing happen, after discharge from hospital, in GC, patient need to go to dispensary to collect your own medicine (if closed go to nearest hospital) in malaysia, the nurse pack those medicines for you. If need refill, then go to pharmacy
I was thinking in Malaysia or Thailand
Those are available at Pharmacy without the need of prescription (except higher dosage or something)
A simple inhaler and nebuliser need to go through all this hassles
You are very right, similar happened to me last Christmas when I was in GC. Took 4+ hours and multiple visits to get a potential hernia diagnosed, it was ridiculous!
My cousin is a doctor in australia. She works from 8-5. In Malaysia, when I was a house officer in the sarawak general hospital, I frequently worked from 4-5am until 10pm-1am. All in the expense of efficiency.
Alty Ortho Specialist Hospital is really good. I'm a local and an athlete, DrNik from Alty has been taking care of my injuries and joints since. Prices are highly affordable compared to other ortho specialists I've gone to in the past.❤
Awesome, thanks for your comment! Best of luck with your next competition/match.
I'm a registered nurse in Australia and I love this perspective! I've often wondered what the healthcare system is like over there (have been thinking of moving there with my family too). We're with medibank here, and we're paying $450 a month (
4 kids) .. Over there would be much cheaper! BTW my husband is fifo and would love to fifo between here and msia if we do move, we've looked at international schools etc and because of the exchange rate it's possible for us to afford. Do you know any fifo couples there?
Hi there! Thanks for watching and sharing your perspective. I think that could be a great move for you, the schools here are highly regarded and I'm sure you'd settle in well. While I don't know any fifo couples here personally, I recently found an Aussie guy on tiktok who's blown up doing this. He works on the mines then spends his off time in bali, pretty cool to see this lifestyle. KL could be a perfect base for your family. I'm working on a community with resources and tools for expats, maybe you'd be interested in that too - stay tuned!
I am a Malaysian and I have never realised and appreciated how efficient and convenient the Malaysia healthcare system is. I have lived in Austrlaia for 7 years and like Jack had described, I had to wait for hours to get to see a GP (medicare). And the more I watch CZcams videos regarding US healthcare system, the more I am amazed how I can just book an appointment with a specialist here in Malaysia even a day before, without referral, for something that's not so serious (with around x2 or 2.5 normal GP cost), compared to seeing how in the US they have to wait for months and even up to a year to get a specialist appointment for something more much serious (in pain), only to need to get another scan and another appointment to look at the scan. It's bizarre. Malaysia is not a bad place eh?
I hope you got at least one valuable takeaway from this video and it opened your eyes to another part of the world. Please let me know by leaving your thoughts or questions as a comment below right now.
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Can foreigners buy Malaysian health insurance from a Malaysian provider?
❤ i whant to go Asia travel for live, I have 50 years, your opinion, is needed buy world health insurance , or just pay as you go to doctors? I have no heating problems for now ... I will not settle in any country, just moving around... ❤
🍜☕
When you are "active" with your partner, did you use your hips a lot?? Hee hee hee hee 😁😁😁😁
@@SteveSentosa Yes, you can, health insurance is big money business, they will never turn the customer away..