>I'm telling Dr. Kim of Kyungpook National University.
>
>I'll ask you some outstanding questions.
>I wonder why the national university requires 6,700 won for surgery
>Of course I know the money doesn't go to the doctor.
>However, the cost is unreasonably high.
>To ask for such excessive medical expenses at a national university hospital
>The government has nothing to do with imposing special taxes on bald people.
>We are patients and have the right to get the right procedure at the right cost.
>The right should never be limited to the rich.
>This is because the pain of poor baldness is not different in quality or quality from that of rich baldness.
>Also, even if Korea is capitalist, medicine is a certain distance from business
>Because I believe it is of sacred value.
>
>There are so many patients who want the procedure, so there's no reason to lower the cost
>You can answer.
>Why is the patient behind for more than a year?
>That's a problem that comes from the monopoly of medicine.
>If you don't limit the transplant method to Kyungpook National University students
>If you spread it to other doctors who are interested
>This exclusive issue will be solved.
>I'm sorry that the analogy is too rough, but please be aware that Dr. Kim's monopoly on medicine, such as the gangster family, is causing many problems.
>The cost of 5 million won to 7 million won has not changed for several years since the market price was formed.
>Nurse-centered procedures that have lowered costs in every way have come out as an alternative, but so far, they have not been able to reduce the market price. As such, the patient's trust in the doctor's hair transplant method is high.
>
>But in my opinion, who is an outsider in medicine, if there is a secret drink
>I believe that the true path of Uiseong is to relieve many patients who suffer by releasing it more widely.
>This is what Heo Jun did. Rather than monopolizing one's secret skills, he has chosen to release them in books and free everyone from suffering, so he is still supported as Uiseong.
>
>The reason why I'm saying this to Dr. Kim is because
>This is because Dr. Kim is a pioneer, top procedure, and symbol in this field.
>However, the cost of the surgery maintained by Kyungpook National University Hospital forms a kind of cartel
>We are tying up the cost of hair transplantation at hospitals nationwide.
>The pioneer, symbol, and the teacher who owns the best alcohol in this field
>If you lower the cost, which hospital will receive more than that?
>Should the disciples of the doctor try to take more?
>Or should I try this in a hospital that doesn't have authority in this field?
>67 million won is too much to pay for transplant surgery in the current middle-class family
>It's definitely an excessive amount of money. It's impossible without great determination and determination
>Especially for patients in their thirties who are suffering badly - the age of joining the company and marriage
>That's the rice cake of the picture. When you're old and you've accumulated enough money to pay this much
>It will be after the effectiveness of transplantation has already decreased.
>Again, most of the patients who suffer deeply are in their twenties.
>(Was there at least one patient in his 40s or older who committed suicide because of baldness?)
>And the reality in Korea is that it is extremely difficult for people in their twenties to afford this cost.
>To put it simply, a child in his 20s needs a car and can give him a car worth 7 million won
>There are only a few parents in Korea. That's the same logic.
>
>The medical power of hair transplantation in Gyeongbuk University has already been widely known throughout the world.
>It is difficult for a name to be known by medicine like this in a local university.
>Once again, I deeply praise Dr. Kim for his hard work.
>However, beyond this small local university complex and overcoming it
>It's time to spread his medicine to other places.
>I hope Dr. Kim's reputation will not be diminished as a blue and blue flag general who made a name for a while at the time.
>And once again, Dr. Kim's broad measure is the way to save the pain of millions of hair loss patients
>I'd like to have it engraved.
>
>To summarize
>First, I hope that we will bring this joy to more people by significantly lowering the cost of surgery
>Secondly, for the demand of patients who will explode at a low cost, doctors from other schools
>Spread this medicine so that you can get the right procedure at the right cost
>Please take a big step.
>
>p.s: I've already had a transplant, and my job is a kind of 'artist', not a doctor who covets this.
> Following the previous opinion, I want to reduce my opinion briefly because I think I'm using too much today
> We have sufficient evidence to support the above suggestion..
> If my logic is lacking, please refute it
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