What’s happening to Thimphu hospital? 
Posted: 08 July 2007 06:34 PM   [ Ignore ]
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The completion of the new hospital in Thimphu shall bring relief to many patients who are hopeful things will get a lot better. From what is visible I see little progress in the work. Can anyone tell me when it will be completed?

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Posted: 09 July 2007 05:56 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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It’s good to know that we are soon going to have a huge building at our JDWNRH complex. Officials are boasting that it will be equipped with advanced state-of-the-art facilities. People expect some drastic changes in health services after the new buidling has been completed. But we doctors feel the new big buidling will be nothing more than a big cave of no hope. This is because the problem of Health in Bhutan is not due to lack of infrastructures but due to poor management. Most of the hospitals in the west and in Australia are small buildings with good facilities and management inside, and warm services. A big building is not necessary. You can see that the authority at our present hospital is already having a tough time managing the day to day business running the “small” hospital. A few days ago, someone complained in the KOL about laboratory investigations in the hospital stopped due to shortage of water. That is not surprising to us. We can not perform many aspects of diagnostic laboratory investigations because reagents are not available. You often hear about shortage of blood at the “national” blood bank. Many of the patients who need urgent blood do not get blood. Operations are postponed due to lack of blood. Empty oxygen tanks in the emergency department is not uncommon. We have cases where asthmatic people have died in the emergency department inspite of the fact that they have made it all the way from Lungtenphu to the emergency department just because there was no oxygen in the oxygen tank! We have asthmatic patients who succumbed to death just because only “one” dose of bronchodilators were available, it’s out of stock!! We have patients who have died in the emergency room because there was no doctor to attend and the nurses wouldn’t bother to attend!! We have nurses who are so worked up that they can sleep standing!!  We have surgeons who operate round the clock for 3-4 days continuously, and still there is no break for him. We have doctors in the emergency room being harassed by gangs at nights. Complaints were lodged at the police but nothing was done because these are big shot kids in Thimphu. The existing number of doctors work tirelessly to keep up with the growing number of patients coming to the hospital everyday. They are already busy and worked out. At present we have only about 25 working doctors in JDWNRH.... one surgeon, three medical specialists, three gynecologists,one ENT specialist, one pedictrician, one opthalmologist, three anesthesiologist, one psychologist, four dentists and about five doctors in the casualty department. We have about 120 nurses. Now with the attachment of the new 350-bed hospital complex to the existing old hospital, lives of our health workes at the JDWNRH will go from bad to worse.  This is because NO steps have been taken to increase the number of health workers including doctors, specialists, and nurses proportional to the expected increase in the work load that will be there after the completion of the new hospital. Doctors are already racing with time in the old hospital, imagine we will have to run the new 350-bed hospital on top!! At the end, will there be any changes in the services provided by the hospital?. Cleanliness and sanitation at the hospital is like our popular “Hongkong Market”. It is still difficult for the visitors to find a good clean not-over crowded toilets in the hospital. We never had a good parking space. The parking lot in front of the hospital has been so jammed everyday. These are the small things that can make a difference if we manage them properly. I personally believe that no matter how small, if we had a good management of our hospital, the story would have been entirely different; and no matter how big our hospital will be in the future, without enough doctors and nurses and other health workers, a big building with every modern facilities inside will not make any difference. When outsiders see, they will see it as a big hospital. When we see, we see an empty monument.

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Posted: 17 July 2007 02:54 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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I am amazed,more sacred .. had only heard/read written by the readers on the open forum but today hearing this from a doctor,a true story really scared me .. oh my god time has come now when we have to have our homes equipped with all the emergency equipments, so when ever there is emergency,we take all the equipments with the patient or call and ask the doctor what to bring - or if really an emergency take all the quipments and let the doctor choose what he would require for that particular emergency .. god help us ..

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Posted: 17 July 2007 05:39 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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In addition to what doctor and middlepath have said, there is another issue which is causing big problem and is hot topic of discussion in all papers. National referral hospital is facing acute shortage of water, and patients are facing major difficulty and danger. Why is this happening? According to officials it is because of “on going construction going on in town”. I think specifically it is because of new broad road below swimming pool. I myself have seen huge city corp. water pipe broken by bulldozer.

Now my question is how can construction authority allow this to happen? Do they not know which areas are affected by such important water source or do they have to wait after destruction of it to see who complains? This is not acceptable and i think that if there is any serious problems like death in hospital related to water, construction authorities must be taken to court. This is really bad.

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Posted: 19 July 2007 02:39 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
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’JDWNRH...The place to heal turning into a venue of hell’ this statement by someone in a fading white coat yesterday (I am told he is a fairly new young doctor) sent shivers down my spine. I have heard rumblings of disturbing happenings in this apex institution, but never really imagined it was so bad.  I am told today that Dr.Tobgyel has resigned and that there are few others who are waiting to use this precedence.  How worse can it get? And who is responsible?

Shortage of doctors and other essential staff - may be we could tolerate as bad planning but nevertheless not very easy to deal with. Only dedicated management, planning and focussed stragetgies can resolve this and that too after a prolonged period of time. May be we can pretend to understand this though someone should have taken all this into consideration before the white elephant is even started.

BUT shortage of water in a hospital???????? That too in JDWNRH??? This is disgusting to say the least. I think time has finally come for some heads to roll in the MOH and JDWNRH.  Anybody listening...or should the public once again appeal to our throne? Whose should roll first?  Make a start by giving the honour to clean the Thimphu Public Toilet to the Medical Director of JDWNRH. God save us all!

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Posted: 09 August 2007 10:30 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
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Nice topic samchar........Well this is not a part of Politics......keep it up members....

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Posted: 09 August 2007 01:03 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 6 ]
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Please read the news “ Service at JDWNRH poor” in http://www.bbs.com.bt

I would like to ask........what the hell was Jigme Singye doing all these time as the Health Minister? Drinking “ara” and “bangchang” and coming to the office with hang overs and dreamy eyes?

Please comment.

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Posted: 09 August 2007 06:35 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 7 ]
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doctor..........and what you doing here? dont you feel responsible even after getting 45% (if u r a doc)? stop pointing fingers and start working 45% more than what you had been doing before!

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Posted: 09 August 2007 07:55 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 8 ]
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Mr. Dontlie.........did I point fingers?........oops........ya I did??........then I guess BBS did the same........showing vividly what Jigme Singye as the Health Minister knew but did not do anything about it......come on man, he was the Health Minister for the last five years and if he did something, five years is enough time to have more doctors, to change the timings of the JDWNRH and implement so many other things. BBS made Jigme Singye blurt out his own shortcomings......which is a fine art of journalism.....and that’s what Anderson Cooper and Larry King does on the CNN...and David Davies and Stephen Sackur does on BBC Hard talk.

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Posted: 15 August 2007 01:13 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 9 ]
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I fully agree with you Doctor. Dr Jigme Singye has been the health minister for the last Five years. Five years is quite a long time, enough to make changes if he wished. Or may be he is seeking another term as a health minister, promising lots of things...thats the way of politicians. Its really a scary story to hear from you about the state of JDWNRH. When will it improve? When will you have enough staff? I think its high time that the JDWNRh should be autonomous with its own power to impliment things....hoping that it works.
just an opinion

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Posted: 16 August 2007 04:07 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 10 ]
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Forget about Patient’s welfare everybody is after VIPs and pseudo-VIPs expecting some return kidus. No matter how big the hospital is general people will still suffer.

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