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2460 Mimuro, Midori Ward, Saitama, 336-8522, Japan
kontakt telefon: +81 48-873-4111
strona internetowej: www.city.saitama.jp
większa mapa i wskazówkiLatitude: 35.8911276, Longitude: 139.6777642
japina poleng
::a terrible hospital my son has a 41.5 fever and just gave a medicine at 3:09 am at a cold weather they just said to wait outside for our ride my son is shiverring this hospital doctors and staff doesnt have a heart and little consideration .
Mika Pettersen-Nomura
::Saved my wife's life. And now saving mine. It’s a newly built hospital, as they replaced the old one. Rebuilt. Clean, tidy, kind staff. Free wifi and bedside free phone recharger socket. Food is tasty.
Yasuやす
::Amazing doctor and nurses, they are so kind and caring yet very professional. I was admitted to hospital for 7 days due to my surgery with general anesthesia. I feel fortunate to be supported by them to go through the tough times.
Gerard Nuezca
::I have high fever and not feeling well but I had to wait for 1 hour to get covid and influenze result before I was able to enter the main hospital where I was asked to wait again. As of the moment I have been waiting for more than 2 hours now and I still haven't talked to any doctor. What a terrible hospital!
Katie Melin
::I love my doctors. They’ll take very good care of you, even visiting just to make sure you’re ok. I hate however the policies of the hospital, which to me make no sense. My prescription for medicine expired because my school fair had its culture festival over the weekend, and both days ended after the pharmacies were closed. The day prior as well held meetings, and I was too busy to step away. The hours to get a new prescription do not work with any working schedule, you’d have to be a housewife or retiree just to make it. A total of 3 hours in the morning. As someone who stayed in the hospital for a week, twice, their policy about not being able to charge phones in a wall socket also doesn’t make sense. I do understand that those wall sockets are a lot of use from emergency equipment, so trying to limit use does make sense to me. However for long term patients keeping that many batteries on hand for a battery-charger is ridiculous, especially when you use your phone to translate all of the Japanese paperwork and Japanese the staff use. I easily went through 2 packs, and a nurse had the gall to laugh at how many I was using. Especially when seemingly only this hospital (or at least only a handful) have such a policy.