And there is a lot of one star!
IF POSSIBLE, CONTACT ANOTHER CLINIC!!!
The first appeal on Saturday is "the child has a virus, everything will go away by itself in 3 days, no special treatment is needed, but we can take a blood test if you are hospitalized with us!"
Repeated treatment on Monday - "we need a blood test and hospitalization for 4 hours, we will pump electrolytes and let them leave the clinic," and then the nightmare began! The doctor can be seen only once at the reception, after hospitalization, the patient is not interesting to anyone. The main task is to hospitalize and stall for time. After agreeing with the insurance company, the child's blood was taken, we were taken to the ward, and an IV was put on. The saline solution was drained in 30 minutes. The electrolytes were switched on at a rate of 80 ml per hour. The package volume is 500 ml. Using simple mathematical operations, you can calculate the time the child is under the drip and this is not 4 hours, but 6.5 + 30 minutes per physical solution = 7 hours. Why cheat on admission? And then, that being in the clinic will not be limited even to these 7 hours, after receiving a blood test, an interpreter will come and tell you that it would be better to stay for a day and dig something else... And the drip is dripping, then not dripping...7 o'clock turns into 9-10-11, and no one cares about the patient. The doctor never came - "a lot of patients." The medical staff responds to requests to approach the baby with a dropper with a long delay. We waited an hour for someone to come up to us and turn off the IV so that we could change the baby's diaper and make it crawl a little, because the baby cannot lie under the IV continuously, for this we will have to hold the crying child by force.
After receiving a blood test, it turns out that there is a bacterial shift, according to the symptoms, it is clear that a bac infection has joined coxsackie - red throat with ulcers, rashes on the butt - pyoderma, well, a blood test, where the presence of a bac infection is visible...but there is no antibiotic prescription. Moreover, the doctor did not even examine the baby completely at admission - legs, butt, and we said that there was a strange rash. The examination includes temperature measurement, examination of the throat, ears. That's IT!
Let's go back to the "ward" - the junior medical staff informs us that first we will be cured of the virus (which, according to the first doctor, passes by itself on Saturday because there is no special treatment for it, and then they will deal with the BAC infection). After I continuously asked the doctor to come, an interpreter, who is also a sales manager, came up to us and said that, well, if you want, the child will still be given a single dose of an antibiotic, but no more. What kind of thoughts does this give you? Either a "left" blood test, but there is a red throat with ulcers and pyoderma, or the tasks of the clinic include not treatment at all, but withdrawal of funds and the longer the patient is in the ward, the more profitable it is. Well, electrolytes are good for reviving, BUT if they drip...and no one checks this if the patient does not look at the package himself.
The result is that the IV was connected from 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. with breaks for changing a diaper and crawling for 3 hours, because it was turned off twice. In 5 hours, a physical solution was pumped for 30 minutes and 150 ml of electrolytes. During this time, at least 360 ml should have been pumped. It's just that the IV was standing half the time, but it wasn't dripping.
Periodically, the medical staff came and injected something from a naked syringe without a name. To the question of what it is, the answer is "it's not medicine", but what? - at 16 o'clock, we resigned ourselves and agreed to stay until the morning so that the electrolytes would be pumped to the end for the child. But we also had to do a test for streptococcus from the throat to still understand if there was an infection, if it was a sore throat. The clinic promised to coordinate it all together with the insurance company. At 19 o'clock, I receive a message from the insurance company that they have not been sent a medical report. And we have been waiting for approval since 16 o'clock. After the message, I ask the clinic to send a medical report to the insurance company and I hear the answer - "if you stay with us until morning, we will coordinate, and if not, then we are not interested in coordinating a test for you. Pay 25 euros for it yourself and leave!" When asked if we can get a drip, I get the answer - "go away, you have already exceeded the time spent in our clinic."
And this is on the stream - everyone has the same thing - everyone is put on for 4 hours and then left for a day-two or three. The neighbors with the baby were not allowed to leave the clinic at all. Well, that's not the story. This is a business, nothing personal!
We have not heard any good reviews about the clinic, only bad ones. Expats don't like this clinic. The local doctors don't respond well.
Oh, yes, my dog in Russia is better off having IVs than an infant in an Anatolian hospital.
And when the IV was removed, they stuck a huge piece of cotton wool!