22 Vascular surgery clinics in Brazil with additional parameter
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22 clinics specializing in Vascular surgery in Brazilwith additional parameter of rating.
Lajeado · 1
Passos · 1
Porto Alegre · 2
Recife · 1
Ribeirão Preto · 2
Rio de Janeiro · 4
Salvador · 1
São Paulo · 9
Vitória · 1
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Lajeado · 1
Passos · 1
Porto Alegre · 2
Recife · 1
Ribeirão Preto · 2
Rio de Janeiro · 4
Salvador · 1
São Paulo · 9
Vitória · 1
5
from Fatima Bertolace Marques
October 29, 2023
I found cordiality and care all the time in my hospitalization
2
from Zsofia Berenyi
March 22, 2022
Took us 3 hours to get treated with a basic appointment (ear infection) and sort out the insurance stuff, very slow
1
from Eliene Silva
January 16, 2022
Hospital is not well equipped to attend cold symptoms at the emergency. You will have to wait for the arrival of an specialist at 10 AM so that he can look inside your ear canal with an otoscope. Even my throat was looked with a cellphone light. A disappointment. See images of equipments that should be part of the emergency below at the national manual of emergency.
Prices for popular procedures:
-
Foam sclerotherapy (Unilateral)
≈ $333
-
Peripheral artery angioplasty and stent placement
≈ $2,709
-
Abdominal endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR)
≈ $8,784
-
Thoracic endovascular aneurysm repair (TEVAR)
≈ $8,549
-
Arteriovenous (AV) fistula surgery
≈ $1,092
-
Endovascular thrombectomy
≈ $2,069
-
Varicose veins treatment
≈ $2,353
-
Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) for varicose veins (Unilateral)
≈ $1,184
-
Endovenous laser ablation (EVLA) for varicose vein (Unilateral)
≈ $1,160
4.1
5 reviews
5
from Fatima Bertolace Marques
October 29, 2023
I found cordiality and care all the time in my hospitalization
2
from Zsofia Berenyi
March 22, 2022
Took us 3 hours to get treated with a basic appointment (ear infection) and sort out the insurance stuff, very slow
1
from Eliene Silva
January 16, 2022
Hospital is not well equipped to attend cold symptoms at the emergency. You will have to wait for the arrival of an specialist at 10 AM so that he can look inside your ear canal with an otoscope. Even my throat was looked with a cellphone light. A disappointment. See images of equipments that should be part of the emergency below at the national manual of emergency.
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Specializations: Cardiac surgery, Vascular surgery, Thoracic surgery, Neurosurgery, Spine surgery, Orthopedic surgery, Oncology
Hospital Copa D'Or is a reference in highly complex treatments. As a high standard general hospital, it encompasses a modern management structure, state-of-the-art equipment and
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1
from Hamid
July 01, 2022
Clean hospital. But extremely expensive. They didn't inform us of the costs and we had to pay 10 times of than other european countries.
1
from Billy Wayne
December 08, 2021
Terrible service. Completely disorganized, does care at all about their patients. I was begging them for help in resolving a billing issue and every department just ignored me. Do not go to this hospital.
I went to this hospital to get an outpatient procedure done which required that I have an attendant with me. The hospital organized for an attendant to be provided, at a fee, from an outside company. On the day of the procedure I was brought to the billing department by member of their "concierge" team, Fernanda. They have an international "concierge" service which basically provides translators so that you can navigate the hospital if your Portugues is not great. At the billing office I was presented with a bill for the cost of the procedure. I agreed to pay it and was then given a credit card machine to make the payment. When the machine arrived, the amount they were requesting was higher than the quoted amount. When I asked Fernanda, she explained that the additional amount was for the cost of the attendant. I paid the invoice and was only provided with a little slip of paper that showed the amount that I had paid. It didn't say what services I had paid for, just that I had paid a certain amount. I then went and got the procedure done. I was put-under, so I don't know how the actual medical procedure went, but from what I saw before I went under, the medical professionals seemed like they were doing a good job. After the procedure was finished, I was brought to the payment office and presented with a new bill. The bill included the additional cost of part of the procedure, the cost to have a biopsy analyzed and the cost of the attendant (which I already paid for). For the next 3 weeks I was going back and forth with the International department, the complaints department and the billing department, trying to get them to acknowledge the fact that I had already paid for the attendant. No one from any of those departments did a single thing to try to help me. Each department passed me off to another department. The complaints department didn't even reply to my complaint. I had to call them up weeks after I had filed a complaint and they were fully aware of the situation, but didn't have enough respect to let me know that they were working on my case or bother to email or call me to help get it resolved. Neither did the International department. When I asked them to help me resolve the issue they just said "this is not my department, I don't know anything about billing" even though FERNANDA was there and was the one that explained to me that I was paying for the the price of the attendant. The billing department just kept sending me the same invoice over and over again and never acknowledging that I had paid for the attendant. It was only when I finally decided to go to the hospital and pay the bill that anything got done. I had to physically go to the International department and demand that they resolve the issue that instant. I spent another 2 hours going to different departments with the "concierge" lady, getting into arguments and explaining over and over what had happened. It was only then, that they acknowledged that the woman who processed my payment allocated the entire amount to the cost of the procedure, which was why this bill for the attendant was still outstanding. At my insistence they finally removed the charge and I was able to pay the invoice. If you go to a Brazilain Hospital, make sure that you get an itemized invoice for every single payment that you make. A little slip of paper with the amount on it is not enough. They will change the amount that you owe them and you have no proof of what you have already paid for. At the end of the day, I probably wasted about 4-5 hours of my time writing emails, sending messages on Whatsapp and arguing with the staff at the hospital. Not to mention all of the frustration it caused. This could have been resolved after 1 email, had anyone at the hospital taken ownership of the problem and been accountable. DO NOT GO HERE - THEY DON'T CARE ABOUT THEIR PATIENTS
5
from Wily Hotspur
March 21, 2019
One of the best hospital in South America
Prices for popular procedures:
-
Peripheral artery angioplasty and stent placement
≈ $2,709
-
Abdominal endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR)
≈ $8,784
-
Thoracic endovascular aneurysm repair (TEVAR)
≈ $8,549
-
Arteriovenous (AV) fistula surgery
≈ $1,092
-
Endovascular thrombectomy
≈ $2,069
-
Renal artery angioplasty and stenting
≈ $2,422
-
Aortography
≈ $722
-
Bentall surgery
≈ $11,046
-
Aortic arch replacement
≈ $5,956
4.4
5 reviews
1
from Hamid
July 01, 2022
Clean hospital. But extremely expensive. They didn't inform us of the costs and we had to pay 10 times of than other european countries.
1
from Billy Wayne
December 08, 2021
Terrible service. Completely disorganized, does care at all about their patients. I was begging them for help in resolving a billing issue and every department just ignored me. Do not go to this hospital.
I went to this hospital to get an outpatient procedure done which required that I have an attendant with me. The hospital organized for an attendant to be provided, at a fee, from an outside company. On the day of the procedure I was brought to the billing department by member of their "concierge" team, Fernanda. They have an international "concierge" service which basically provides translators so that you can navigate the hospital if your Portugues is not great. At the billing office I was presented with a bill for the cost of the procedure. I agreed to pay it and was then given a credit card machine to make the payment. When the machine arrived, the amount they were requesting was higher than the quoted amount. When I asked Fernanda, she explained that the additional amount was for the cost of the attendant. I paid the invoice and was only provided with a little slip of paper that showed the amount that I had paid. It didn't say what services I had paid for, just that I had paid a certain amount. I then went and got the procedure done. I was put-under, so I don't know how the actual medical procedure went, but from what I saw before I went under, the medical professionals seemed like they were doing a good job. After the procedure was finished, I was brought to the payment office and presented with a new bill. The bill included the additional cost of part of the procedure, the cost to have a biopsy analyzed and the cost of the attendant (which I already paid for). For the next 3 weeks I was going back and forth with the International department, the complaints department and the billing department, trying to get them to acknowledge the fact that I had already paid for the attendant. No one from any of those departments did a single thing to try to help me. Each department passed me off to another department. The complaints department didn't even reply to my complaint. I had to call them up weeks after I had filed a complaint and they were fully aware of the situation, but didn't have enough respect to let me know that they were working on my case or bother to email or call me to help get it resolved. Neither did the International department. When I asked them to help me resolve the issue they just said "this is not my department, I don't know anything about billing" even though FERNANDA was there and was the one that explained to me that I was paying for the the price of the attendant. The billing department just kept sending me the same invoice over and over again and never acknowledging that I had paid for the attendant. It was only when I finally decided to go to the hospital and pay the bill that anything got done. I had to physically go to the International department and demand that they resolve the issue that instant. I spent another 2 hours going to different departments with the "concierge" lady, getting into arguments and explaining over and over what had happened. It was only then, that they acknowledged that the woman who processed my payment allocated the entire amount to the cost of the procedure, which was why this bill for the attendant was still outstanding. At my insistence they finally removed the charge and I was able to pay the invoice. If you go to a Brazilain Hospital, make sure that you get an itemized invoice for every single payment that you make. A little slip of paper with the amount on it is not enough. They will change the amount that you owe them and you have no proof of what you have already paid for. At the end of the day, I probably wasted about 4-5 hours of my time writing emails, sending messages on Whatsapp and arguing with the staff at the hospital. Not to mention all of the frustration it caused. This could have been resolved after 1 email, had anyone at the hospital taken ownership of the problem and been accountable. DO NOT GO HERE - THEY DON'T CARE ABOUT THEIR PATIENTS
5
from Wily Hotspur
March 21, 2019
One of the best hospital in South America
São Paulo, Brazil
Specializations: Cardiac surgery, Vascular surgery, Thoracic surgery, Neurosurgery, Spine surgery, Orthopedic surgery, Oncology
Hospital Sírio-Libanês, in Bela Vista, is a reference center for highly complex procedures and integrated action in various specialties, such as Cardiology and Oncology .
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Clinics grouping by rating
Clinic with the highest rating of 4.7 — GRAACC Hospital in São Paulo, Brazil and 2 more, clinic with the most reviews number of 4938 — Hospital São Camilo Pompeia in São Paulo, Brazil.
With rating 4.0 and over — 22 clinics .
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Procedures
Diseases
- Aortoiliac allografting ≈ $8,037
- Arteriovenous malformations (AVM) embolization ≈ $2,712
- Bilateral varicose veins surgery ≈ $962
- Carotid and intracerebral thrombolysis ≈ $8,505
- Carotid angioplasty and stenting ≈ $3,644
- Carotid endarterectomy (CEA) ≈ $2,739
- Catheter embolization ≈ $1,731
- Embolization of peripheral arteries aneurysm ≈ $4,770
- Endoscopic vein harvesting (EVH) for coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) ≈ $356
- Endovascular thrombectomy ≈ $2,084
- Femoral-popliteal bypass graft surgery ≈ $3,559
- Internal or external carotid artery embolization by request
- Pelvic vein embolization (PVE) ≈ $1,529
- Prostatic artery embolization (PAE) ≈ $2,519
- Renal arteries embolization (RAE) ≈ $1,334
- Renal artery bypass surgery ≈ $4,971
- Unilateral varicose veins surgery ≈ $958
- Uterine artery embolization (UAE) ≈ $2,222
- Varicose veins treatment ≈ $2,370
- Venaseal glue therapy of varicose vein (Unilateral) ≈ $1,992
- Acute limb ischemia
- Aortoiliac occlusive disease (AIOD)
- Arterial embolism
- Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs)
- Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH)
- Brachiocephalic occlusive disease
- Carotid artery disease
- Carotid body paraganglioma
- Celiac artery stenosis
- Chronic kidney disease
- Chronic limb ischemia
- Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension
- Deep vein thrombosis (DVT)
- External iliac artery dissection
- Liver cirrhosis
- Portal hypertension
- Renal artery stenosis
- Uterine fibroids
- Varicose veins
- Vascular tumor