
I went to Thailand to fix my teeth after an electric shock. It's left me much worse off
They were ground down to stubs and some had fallen out.
After both my parents passed away and I got divorced in the four years between 2015 to 2019, I was at the lowest point of my depression and had put on 40kg. I felt isolated and didn't want anything to do with anyone. When I turned 50 in 2019, I met a partner and took charge of my health. I started going to the gym to get out of the house and gradually felt better. I was eating well, walked daily, was seeing a psychologist but was still very self-conscious about my teeth.
I thought if I could fix my teeth, and if I could make the outside look good, maybe the inside will follow — and my problems would be fixed.
'A rash decision' I had managed to save a little money from my parents' inheritance and my work teaching disability advocacy. But I still couldn't afford the dental work I needed in Australia. I was on social media when an ad for medical dental tourism popped up. I clicked, sent some X-rays and photos, had a chat on WhatsApp and received a quote. I prepaid for surgery and the included accommodation and booked a flight to Bangkok. I haven't made such a rash decision since I was a young boy.
It was daunting yet exciting as I had never been out of Australia. I am a homebody; I like my dog, my garden and the beach.
Patrick's teeth. Source: Supplied I thought I looked a million dollars with the new temporary crowns the Thai dental team gave me during my first appointment. The second appointment of eight is where things took a turn for the worse. My face became swollen and I could barely lift my head. I slept all day on the painkillers and anti-inflammatories. Of course, it was major dental work, so it was going to hurt. However, one tooth hurt more than the rest — so much so I had a day off surgery due to the swelling. I told the team about my pain, and they said it would settle but I didn't feel they took it seriously. Someone from their administration then told me the cost of the overall surgery was going to be double what I initially paid, which brought the total to upwards of $20,000.
As I couldn't leave with just half a mouth of teeth, I had to borrow the money from a friend back home.
'Something felt wrong' After two weeks, I felt stable enough to fly home. My new teeth looked great, but something felt wrong as I still had pain in that one tooth. I started to feel worse and over the next six months, I went on eight courses of antibiotics to try to fight an infection doctors couldn't identify the source of. This was until one day, the crown of the tooth that had given me pain just fell off.
I went to a local dentist who discovered my gum was infected to the bone and into the sinus. He had to remove three teeth, a lot of my gum and part of my upper jawbone.
I somewhat locked myself away from the world during this time as the pain was excruciating. The reason I had tried to fix my teeth was to feel more comfortable, be more social and boost my low self-esteem. It did the opposite. By the end of that year, I had retreated from everything — including my social circles and disability advocacy. I felt that all the progress I had made working on myself in the previous years was gone within the space of months.
I went for the dentist that looked glitzy and glammy and probably didn't do my due diligence with research.
Patrick earlier this year. Source: Supplied Today, nearly two years on, I am considering going back to Thailand for implants to replace the lost teeth. But with a different dentist, of course. I was a bit rash in my decision, but I am not against medical tourism. Why would I be? I was unlucky. I believe the same thing could happen in Australia. For crisis and mental health support, contact Lifeline (13 11 14), SANE Australia (1800 187 263) or 13Yarn (139 276), a 24/7 Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islanders crisis support line.

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SBS Australia
7 days ago
- SBS Australia
I went to Thailand to fix my teeth after an electric shock. It's left me much worse off
From cosmetic fixes to life-saving surgery, Insight hears from people who have turned to medical tourism. Is it always worth it, and what happens when things go wrong far from home? Watch Insight episode Medical Tourism on SBS On Demand . I put myself in dangerous situations as a boy growing up in the suburbs of Melbourne. When I was 10 years old, I was jumping between the tops of cattle trucks in a cattle yard where I slipped. Grabbing an overhead powerline to regain balance, I was shocked with 1500V DC that threw me to the ground — and left me with a broken jaw and brain trauma. The images of the other children in the hospital with facial burn injuries still traumatises me, four decades later. Sometimes the smell of certain barbecued meats makes me dry retch. When I was in my twenties, I was involved in a serious motor vehicle accident and suffered a head injury that caused movement in my jaw and led to my teeth grinding in a different position. You see beautiful people with beautiful smiles everywhere you turn in the media. Because I didn't have one, I always covered my mouth, even when I laughed. I spent the following years in and out of the dentist, having my teeth capped and repaired in Australia. But they never lasted. They were ground down to stubs and some had fallen out. After both my parents passed away and I got divorced in the four years between 2015 to 2019, I was at the lowest point of my depression and had put on 40kg. I felt isolated and didn't want anything to do with anyone. When I turned 50 in 2019, I met a partner and took charge of my health. I started going to the gym to get out of the house and gradually felt better. I was eating well, walked daily, was seeing a psychologist but was still very self-conscious about my teeth. I thought if I could fix my teeth, and if I could make the outside look good, maybe the inside will follow — and my problems would be fixed. 'A rash decision' I had managed to save a little money from my parents' inheritance and my work teaching disability advocacy. But I still couldn't afford the dental work I needed in Australia. I was on social media when an ad for medical dental tourism popped up. I clicked, sent some X-rays and photos, had a chat on WhatsApp and received a quote. I prepaid for surgery and the included accommodation and booked a flight to Bangkok. I haven't made such a rash decision since I was a young boy. It was daunting yet exciting as I had never been out of Australia. I am a homebody; I like my dog, my garden and the beach. Patrick's teeth. Source: Supplied I thought I looked a million dollars with the new temporary crowns the Thai dental team gave me during my first appointment. The second appointment of eight is where things took a turn for the worse. My face became swollen and I could barely lift my head. I slept all day on the painkillers and anti-inflammatories. Of course, it was major dental work, so it was going to hurt. However, one tooth hurt more than the rest — so much so I had a day off surgery due to the swelling. I told the team about my pain, and they said it would settle but I didn't feel they took it seriously. Someone from their administration then told me the cost of the overall surgery was going to be double what I initially paid, which brought the total to upwards of $20,000. As I couldn't leave with just half a mouth of teeth, I had to borrow the money from a friend back home. 'Something felt wrong' After two weeks, I felt stable enough to fly home. My new teeth looked great, but something felt wrong as I still had pain in that one tooth. I started to feel worse and over the next six months, I went on eight courses of antibiotics to try to fight an infection doctors couldn't identify the source of. This was until one day, the crown of the tooth that had given me pain just fell off. I went to a local dentist who discovered my gum was infected to the bone and into the sinus. He had to remove three teeth, a lot of my gum and part of my upper jawbone. I somewhat locked myself away from the world during this time as the pain was excruciating. The reason I had tried to fix my teeth was to feel more comfortable, be more social and boost my low self-esteem. It did the opposite. By the end of that year, I had retreated from everything — including my social circles and disability advocacy. I felt that all the progress I had made working on myself in the previous years was gone within the space of months. I went for the dentist that looked glitzy and glammy and probably didn't do my due diligence with research. Patrick earlier this year. Source: Supplied Today, nearly two years on, I am considering going back to Thailand for implants to replace the lost teeth. But with a different dentist, of course. I was a bit rash in my decision, but I am not against medical tourism. Why would I be? I was unlucky. I believe the same thing could happen in Australia. For crisis and mental health support, contact Lifeline (13 11 14), SANE Australia (1800 187 263) or 13Yarn (139 276), a 24/7 Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islanders crisis support line.


SBS Australia
27-07-2025
- SBS Australia
'Hell-bent on trying to give him time': The Australians going overseas for cancer trials
From cosmetic fixes to life-saving surgery, Insight hears from people who have turned to medical tourism. Is it always worth it, and what happens when things go wrong, far from home? Watch Insight episode Medical Tourism Tuesday 29 July at 8.30pm on SBS or live on SBS On Demand . When Hannah Thomas, 32, received a phone call following a routine blood test, she did not expect it would lead to a cancer diagnosis that same week. In 2022, Hannah was diagnosed with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), a type of cancer that affects the blood and bone marrow, where there's an overproduction of immature white blood cells. She was immediately admitted to hospital and underwent chemotherapy five days a week for two months. The chemotherapy did not work but following other treatments, including a bone marrow transplant , Hannah had no traces of cancer in her body a year later. However, shortly after Hannah married in 2023, the cancer came back. She and her husband, Simon, met with Hannah's haematologist and were introduced to the concept of CAR T-cell therapy, a form of immunotherapy that uses a patient's own genetically modified T-cells (a type of white blood cell). This experimental cancer treatment is offered in Australia for the more common B-cell type of ALL but is not currently offered as standard treatment for T-cell ALL. But Hannah didn't qualify for the clinical trials in Melbourne and London, so she and Simon decided to seek the treatment in Singapore. Hannah and Simon married in 2023, shortly before her cancer came back. Source: Supplied The Sydney couple had less than 24 hours to figure out how they were going to pay for the costs of the trial and accommodation, which they estimated to be around $400,000. The couple immediately investigated loans and started the application process to withdraw their superannuation. "In the end, the only reason we were able to catch that flight and go there was because one of our closest friends Dan set up a GoFundMe for us," Hannah told Insight. "Though it's hard not to feel a bit guilty. And I think it's only natural to wonder if you're worthy of all that." Seeking options abroad Like Hannah and Simon, Dianne Mehmet turned to Asia for experimental cancer treatment when options in Australia became limited. Dianne's son Jordan had just finished high school in 2013 when he was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma — a rare, aggressive cancerous tumour that affects bones and soft tissue. The 18-year-old went through three years of intensive treatment, including radiotherapy, chemotherapy and surgery to remove tumours in his body. However, his condition worsened. Feeling like there was nothing more their medical team could do in Australia, Dianne was desperate to take her son anywhere that might give him a chance to live longer. "With Ewing sarcoma, most people do not live past five years … but I just was hell-bent on trying to give him time," Dianne said. Dianne took her son Jordan to China for experimental cancer treatment. Source: Supplied After hearing about a friend's positive experience, Dianne took Jordan to China in 2016, where he continued conventional treatment for cancer but with the addition of natural therapy. To afford the cost of overseas accommodation and the $100,000 treatment, Dianne remortgaged the family home and crowdfunded with support from their local community. "I didn't want Jordan to think for one more minute, 'What am I going to do?' and have it hanging over his head." Medical tourism's rising popularity Nine years on from when Dianne and Jordan sought treatment overseas, medical tourism continues to grow in popularity. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, roughly 15,000 Australians went on self-funded medical tourism trips each year, according to a 2022 Victoria University thesis. Cosmetic surgery, dentistry, heart surgery, fertility treatments, gender-affirming surgery, stem-cell therapy and cancer treatments are the most common medical reasons Australians go abroad. "We have a world-class health system in Australia, but it can't do everything for everyone at all times," Dr Michael Bonning told Insight. The general physician and Australian Medical Association (NSW) president says that, in addition to the unavailability of certain treatments in Australia, saving money also motivates many to participate in medical tourism. "Sometimes it is because of access; we just don't do some of these procedures. And the second part is sometimes because of cost." But seeking treatment overseas is riskier than sticking with Australia's highly regulated health system, he warns. "When you go overseas, you open yourself up to other challenges [such as] language barriers. Sometimes we also see the standards of care are not the same as we would expect here." The cost and personal toll of travel were two other factors people considering medical tourism should take into account, he added. 'A single purpose' Hannah and Simon lived in Singapore for five months while Hannah participated in the clinical trial. They celebrated Christmas, New Year and Hannah's 32nd birthday while she was in hospital. Simon said that there were many dark times for him during those five months but "obviously nothing compared to what Hannah was going through". "What made it simple for me was having a single purpose ... to look after Hannah, make sure she was comfortable and got the treatment that she needed," Simon said. "And ultimately to get her better and bring her back." Hannah received treatment at a Singapore hospital. Source: Supplied Upon completion of the trial, Hannah was discharged with no detectable cancer cells. They returned to Sydney where, after a second bone marrow transplant, the good news was confirmed again. "I'm in remission and I have been for the last 15 months, but I say that with caution because we still have tests every eight weeks … to check and see if the cancer is coming back." The impact of overseas treatment For Dianne's son Jordan, things appeared to be improving with the "amazing" Chinese medical team working with him. "He was going very well at the start … he felt 100 per cent supported." However, Jordan started to behave unusually towards the end of their three-month stay. Doctors then discovered he had brain swelling due to a growing tumour. After emergency surgery and changes to his treatment while in operation recovery, Jordan's cancer continued to metastasise. Although overseas treatment didn't wholly work for Jordan, Dianne doesn't regret her attempt to give her son a longer life. Source: Supplied The family returned home to Melbourne in October 2016 where Jordan died three months later at the age of 22. Dianne says she would have liked for all of Jordan's treatment to have taken place in Australia if more could have been done to save her son. "If you have to travel overseas for treatment, your life is disrupted in so many ways. And it's not just you, it's the impact on your family [and] your friends," she says. "You're living in a place where you don't speak the language, you're totally out of your comfort zone. You can't have all your support there." Although the treatment did not wholly work for Jordan, Dianne does not regret taking him overseas for experimental treatment. "He was happy, and he always had hope. "I wanted him to have hope right up till the last minute."

AU Financial Review
02-07-2025
- AU Financial Review
Blood doping and Botox: the spa where holiday glow is clinical grade
The cultural buzz around high-end health clinics is loud. The White Lotus brought us biometric testing and sensory deprivation tanks in the tropics, and the latest season of Nine Perfect Strangers plays out in an alpine medi-spa so lavish you'd overlook the twisted plot lines in the name of a visit. Sitting in a plump armchair hooked up to an IV drip, I could be in either one of those shows. Instead, I'm at Rakxa, an integrated wellness and medical retreat on the outskirts of Bangkok. It's positioned on the tiny island of Bang Krachao about 40 minutes from the centre of the Thai capital, and fuses Western medicine, ancient healing traditions, longevity and luxury into one 32-hectare, 42-villa retreat.