No need to to carry an IC or cash. Many people seem willing to give him an extra egg or two for free.
I have done a comparison and waiting times in Singapore are similar to those in NY. Emergency services are always stretched in any country. I waited 10 hours in Auckland when I broke my ankle. ...
A broken ankle may be painful but you probably had to wait because they had more serious cases to attent to.
I had a surgery two years ago. Post ops changing of dressing usually wait around half hour so long as you are punctual.A broken ankle may be painful but you probably had to wait because they had more serious cases to attent to.
I use to go to the emergency room in Edmonton to change my dressing for a post surgical infection. Must have gone there everyday for 3+ weeks. I did try to do it at home but the doctor was concerned because it was a very deep incision. Just imagine going everyday & waiting 3 to 4 hours just to change a dressing:o
I was always surprised by the number of emergency cases the hospital had everyday. Even on sundays.
I knew that my case was not life threatening so I had no problem with the waiting.
It is perfectly acceptable for people who are important to the nation to be given priority.
Non private hospitals should be providing care based on need & not on who the patients are.
...When it comes to viral infections, it is very difficult for emergency departments to classify exactly how serious the case is. Wrong calls are sometimes made. It's simply a fact of life.
This case might have been attended to sooner if Spore was not so overcrowded
We are all paying the price for the PAP's population policy. The PAP will of course deny this. It's just another "honest mistake" .
Talk is cheap. If one of your children had to wait at A&E because a convicted pedophile rapist had attempted suicide in prison had to be attended to first based on need, you'd be singing a different tune. If your kid died as a result, you'd be up in arms against the system you now prescribe to.
All systems have a pecking order. In NZ, if you're over 60, you drop off the waiting list for a transplant. Discrimination against the old or simply a pragmatic policy of not wasting precious organs on the elderly?
All policies have their upsides and downsides.
The tangible benefits of the population policy far outweigh the negative effects.
The MRT line is breaking down. People are dying in our hospitals. We are drinking recylcled water....
During Spore's golden age we had a population of 2 to 2.5 million. Now we probably have over 5+ million people here. What are the "tangible" benefits![]()
The MRT line is breaking down. People are dying in our hospitals. We are drinking recylcled water....
During Spore's golden age we had a population of 2 to 2.5 million. Now we probably have over 5+ million people here. What are the "tangible" benefits![]()
The suffering of peasants is not an issue for those who live a comfortable existence.
The ruling govt and the elite will not grasp and are not in position to grasp as their families know the best medical practitioners, have access to the best and can pay for the best. Yet we depend on vegetable vendors to our daily existence.