Publication: Medical cost and illness pattern among Ramathibodi medical students
Issued Date
2001-03-01
Resource Type
ISSN
01252208
Other identifier(s)
2-s2.0-0035291157
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Mahidol University
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand. Vol.84, No.3 (2001), 402-407
Suggested Citation
Kornthong Assavanich, Saisunee Tubtimtes, Somjit Prueksaritanond Medical cost and illness pattern among Ramathibodi medical students. Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand. Vol.84, No.3 (2001), 402-407. Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/26826
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Title
Medical cost and illness pattern among Ramathibodi medical students
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Abstract
Background : In Thailand, health care expenditure has increased more than three times from the 1982 to 1992. Health care of medical students does not reflect the actual costs because of the strong personal relationship between doctors and patients (ie. medical students). Many items are waived in the patient's favour. The objectives of study in medical students were analysed in unit cost, cost recovery, illness pattern and health service uses. Method : From May 1997 to April 1998 the prescription cost and illness pattern were retrospectively studied and analysed. There were 1,063 out-patient visits and 8 in-patient cases from 416 medical student case records of Ramathibodi Hospital. The annual subscription for medical student is 700 baht per person per year, but the actual medical costs are higher 53,213 baht, excluding investment, materials and labour cost. The most common illness was upper respiratory tract infection. The average cost per prescription was 163 baht (range 6-1391 baht) and the sixth year students spent more than the fourth and fifth years. Frequency of consultation was more in the fourth than the fifth and sixth year students and total medical students (namely 4.01, 1.66, 1.92, 2.55 times/student/year respectively). The consultation was done in the emergency room (72.0%) more often than in the health clinic (1.9%). Conclusion : Medical students should attend special clinics regularly, except in an emergency, to get continual medicare and save medical costs. Determining the maximum medical cost per student per year is a strategy of saving cost. To promote understanding and allay anxiety, medical students should have the benefit of health promotion, prevention and orientation as they are in continual contact with all forms of contagious diseases. If this preventive measure is effective, the incidence of illness should be lower and the cost reduced.