Nearly unheard of in the Western world, but not in China, where’s fee-for-service gone wild:
Mi Zhantao, a poor 25-year-old living with his parents outside this provincial capital in eastern China, was battling depression and had trouble socializing. Doctors said he had schizophrenia. They recommended brain surgery.Mr. Mi’s family spent about $4,800 — the equivalent of four years’ income, and more than their life savings — on the operation, at No. 454 Hospital of the People’s Liberation Army in Nanjing. The highly controversial procedure involved drilling tiny holes in the young man’s skull, inserting a 7½-inch-long needle and burning small areas of brain tissue thought to be causing his problems.
The surgeon, who operated on Mr. Mi the day he met him, says he has performed nearly 1,000 such procedures, mostly for schizophrenia, but also for illnesses ranging from depression to epilepsy, since the hospital started offering the operation in 2004.
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believe or not, contrary to this article, there are some of us doctors(MD’s and DO’s) who accept only cash for our services. we may take a bit of medicare and ins, but not much. thank you very much, but the chinese dont have a monopoly on getting paid with real dollar bills(U.S. dollar bills, at that).
wish more doctors would brighten up and do the same
What a nightmare! It’s obvious that these patients and families are getting taken advantage of. If there is any legitimacy to this technique (which I doubt), the best way to establish it is by a randomized study with a control group, not by adminsitering questionnaires to the treatment group is some hospital that doesn’t even have a name. Good grief.
Dominic A. Carone, Ph.D.
Founder and Webmaster of MedFriendly.com and The MedFriendly blog.
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