sin información
🕗 horarios
Domingo | ⚠ | |||||
Lunes | ⚠ | |||||
Martes | ⚠ | |||||
Miércoles | ⚠ | |||||
Jueves | ⚠ | |||||
Viernes | ⚠ | |||||
Sábado | ⚠ |
9 Masang-gil, Yesan-eup, Yesan-gun, Chungcheongnam-do, South Korea
contactos teléfono: +82 41-338-9119
mapa e indicacionesLatitude: 36.6780563, Longitude: 126.8343375
My Young Lee
::It was nice to have trust in the hospital staff, who were friendlier than any other military hospital, the interior of the hospital was clean, and most of all, the doctor who explained everything in detail.
Beetle Juice
::This is the hospital my 90-year-old father went to when he moved due to budget constraints. My father suffered severe back pain due to a fall earlier this year and occasionally complained of nerve pain throughout the left side of his body. My father went to this hospital after seeing a flyer that said nerve block surgery was performed at this hospital, where Dr. Lim Jeong-mook was the director. However, when I asked for a consultation about nerve block surgery, they just gave me a vague explanation. I also met Dr. Lim Jeong-muk once while visiting my father in the U.S., and I couldn't trust him because he spoke informally to my father, who is 90, and showed an attitude of just trying to ignore everything. Since I came from the United States to take care of my sick father, I asked for the name of my father's disease and his signature on the documents I had prepared to receive paid family leave, and he wrote 'Alzheimer'. I was surprised and asked if my father really had dementia, and he said that's how old he is. He said that he had dementia and was talking about things he would only hear at the neighborhood hospital. Not even Dementia Alzheimer's is not something that can be judged so rashly without a detailed examination. I couldn't understand how someone who graduated from Yonsei University and was a professor at Korea University could say something like that. And the reason my father visited Dr. Lim Jeong-muk was because of pain in his lower back and general nerves on the left side. But the name of the disease is Alzheimer's... Yes, it may have been because I was bothered by the strange document that wasn't even an official diagnosis and asked to sign it. However, during the next visit, when his father more persistently requested consultation about nerve block surgery, he did not respond well and ignored his father. They lacked the attitude to look at the patient as a person, they made a lot of noise about nerve block surgery, but they didn't have the ability to perform such a procedure, or they didn't want to do such a troublesome procedure, so they went around and around. I am very suspicious of the career history displayed grandiosely on the door of the clinic.