The man, who lived alone in a city north of Tokyo, called an ambulance after suffering breathing problems at his home in January.
Paramedics rushed to his house but were told in turn by all 25 hospitals in the area that they could not accept the man because they did not have enough doctors or any free beds, a local city official said, adding some institutions were contacted more than once.
The ambulance eventually made a 20 minute drive to a hospital in neighbouring Ibaraki prefecture, but the man was pronounced dead shortly after arrival. The cause of death has not been made public.
One of the paramedics told Jiji Press they had never experienced "a patient being rejected so many times".
The city of Kuki, where the man lived, in Saitama prefecture, has asked hospitals in the region to improve their emergency room capacity, the official said.
Public healthcare in Japan is heavily subsidised and generally of a high global standard.
But commentators warn that with a population that is living longer and with fewer young people entering the workforce, healthcare operators could become increasingly strained over the coming decades.
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@Baba Ji: No, Japanese man dying wasn't the point nor was it meant for comparison. Going to 36 hospitals and being turned away by all 36 was odd hence it was reported as "oddity" and the story is taken from AFP. The article actually mentions that Japan generally has healthcare of a very high global standard but with some concerns.
On the meantime, when japan is short of emegency rooms due to increasing population, karachi is short of graveyards and morgue centres. We have a different solution for Population Control..
One man dies in Japan and it is NEWS !!!!! come on E.T. you want all of us third world dwellers to feel good that this happens in first world too ? some comparison ... some consolation !!!!
what a shame .
That sounds like a great opportunity for Japanese speaking Pakistani Doctors!! Start enrolling for Japanese, folks!