One eye specialist who is becoming very well
known in Pattaya is Dr. Somchai Trakoolshokesatian, the
ophthalmologist from the Bangkok-Pattaya Hospital. He is dedicated
to helping people to see, using new surgical techniques, so I
suppose that he could be called a doctor with a vision!
He was born in Nakhon Sawan, of Thai-Chinese
parents. “We were very poor,” said Dr. Somchai. “My father was a
labourer, and my mother had a small shop in the village.”
Fortunately, or perhaps with foresight, his parents were satisfied
with just one child, as family finances were not good.
He
did well at the local government schools, mixing his studies with
helping his mother in the shop, or going with his father to assist
him in any way that he could. During this time, his interest in art
became very strong and he ventured to his parents that he would like
to study to become an artist. However, his parents were hoping that
their only son would take another direction in life. “The dream of
all Thai-Chinese families is for their children to become doctors.
It was my parent’s dream.” So like all good Thai-Chinese sons,
Somchai Trakoolshokesatian went to university to study medicine.
The fees were not too expensive at Chiang Mai
University, and he went there for six years to study for his basic
degree. In return for government assistance young doctors become
indentured and must serve three years in a public hospital. For Dr.
Somchai, this was to be in Tak province, close to the Burmese
border. “We saw lots of Burmese Hill Tribe people, and held clinics
for them, like an extension of the hospital.” These out-patient
clinics were a three day walk with elephants! “We could not ride the
elephants, they carried the medicines and equipment.” Looking at the
decidedly non-muscular Dr. Somchai, it is hard to imagine this man
trekking through the jungles, but he did.
After his three years, he decided to become an
eye specialist. “When I was a student I heard many beautiful stories
about patients whom doctors had helped to see. It impressed me. I
wanted to be able to share happiness. I am not just helping someone
to see, it makes me happy too, when operations are successful.”
There was another reason too. “Eye surgery is
very delicate work. Many doctors are scared of the very delicate
nature of it. It’s close to being art work,” said Dr. Somchai by
explanation.
After another three years at Chiang Mai
University, he become a licensed Eye Specialist, certified by the
Board of Ophthalmology in 1994.
An amazing scenario then emerged. Here was Dr.
Somchai, with his shiny new certificate, but there were no positions
vacant for newly qualified ophthalmologists at any of the government
hospitals. Eventually there was a vacancy in a hospital in Rayong
which he took. Three months later the hospital closed, and the new
ophthalmologist was unemployed again!
A friend of his opened a polyclinic and asked him
to help him out, working as a general surgeon/GP/physician for the
next 12 months. This was not what he wanted to do, but at least it
kept some money coming in. This was necessary, as by this stage he
had married and had one son to rear.
However, in 1996, the Bangkok-Pattaya Hospital
was looking for a resident ophthalmologist, and Dr. Somchai, wife
and son moved to Pattaya.
Now fully employed in his own specialty, he was
very interested in refractive surgery. It was the artistry that he
had always leaned towards, and he could combine his artistic skills
with the demands of eye surgery. LASIK became the new way to correct
refractive errors and Dr. Somchai went to Antwerp, Belgium to do the
international course in Refractive Laser Surgery.
He followed this up, the following year, with the
international course in Refractive Surgery (Akkommodative-1CU) in
Munich, Germany. This was to learn the very latest techniques in
implantation of Intra Ocular Lenses (IOLs). It was here that he
began to formulate his own ideas, and could see that one very
important factor was to select the right lens for the differing eyes
of the patient’s. This required extreme accuracy in pre-operation
measurements. He visited the company in Germany that was making IOLs
and discussed the calculations and formulae that were being used.
He returned to Thailand and began to develop a
system by which his accurate measurements were then followed by
insertion of an IOL that could be focussed, using the patients own
ciliary muscles (small muscles in the eye that are used to change
the focal length of the normal lens). The end result was a lens that
acted like a normal one, able to see distance, but still could be
focussed close up, to make reading glasses no longer needed. “I had
to change the point of view to be that of the patient, rather than
that of the doctor.” In this way he could begin to see (sorry about
the pun) the needs of the patients and adapt the methods to assist
them. He called his system “SuperSight” and is now the leading
surgeon in the world using the special German lenses, implanting 90
percent of the companies output.
Now his SuperSight takes up even more than 90
percent of his time, both at work and at home. His relaxation is
watching videos of his surgery, looking to see what he might be able
to improve.
I asked him if SuperSight were now an obsession
and Dr. Somchai stopped for a minute before answering. “This makes
me sad. Everyone around me, and my family, helps me. What am I doing
for them?” That is a question that only Dr. Somchai can answer, with
his family now one more with a two week old daughter, but the
testimonials he receives from happy patients shows what he is doing
for some of the world’s visually impaired is very much appreciated.
Dr. Somchai Trakoolshokesatian, the eye artist, is a remarkable
man.