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Kwai River Christian Hospital

An Little Bit Of Our History

While the hospital's aim has remained the same throughout its history - to offer high quality medical care and present the Gospel to a marginalised, poor and neglected community - much has changed since the early years.

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Our Story

At the beginning, travel and supply from Bangkok to the hospital commonly took one day by train and two days by hang yaw boat. Staff had to produce most of their own vegetables and meat. Patients arrived at the hospital on foot, by bicycle, on motorcycle, carried in a hammock suspended from a bamboo pole, in ox-carts, in dugout canoes and on elephant back. The mobile clinic vehicle was an ox cart and pair of bulls. There was no telephone or email. Emergency communications with the outside world relied on border police radio.

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Today, the hospital is a six hour journey from Bangkok on a surfaced road, there is a local weekly market and a number of shops, patients commonly arrive by motorcycle and some by pick-up truck, and the area has cell phone coverage.

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The hospital came into being through the opening of the Sangkla Christian Mission. Construction of the first two missionary residences began in late 1960. Dr. Douglas O Corpron, a UCMS (Disciples of Christ) missionary was the first hospital director of the Kwai River Christian Hospital. He arrived in March of 1961. Medical work began immediately in a small wooden shed built to serve as a clinic until a hospital building was completed 2 years later.

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In 1969 the name of the Sangkla Christian Mission was changed to the Kwai River Christian Mission to reflect the fact that the work was no longer only in the Sangklaburi District. Still later, the Kwai River Christian Mission [which included the Kwai River Christian Hospital, the United Christian School, a Christian hostel (boarding house for students living far from the school), and an evangelism program] joined with churches in the region to became part of the 16th District of the Church of Christ in Thailand, a national nondenominational protestant group.

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In July 1970, faced with a shortage of medical personnel, the hospital was required by law to temporarily cease operations. There was a brief reopening during 1972, but it was not until March 1974, when Dr. John Freeman arrived, that the hospital fully reopened again. During the mid 1970s the hospital commenced off-site public health clinics, seeing the potential for a village health program to prevent many more illnesses and deaths than a small hospital would otherwise be able to.

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Today, the hospital is a six hour journey from Bangkok on a surfaced road, there is a local weekly market and a number of shops, patients commonly arrive by motorcycle and some by pick-up truck, and the area has cell phone coverage.

 

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During the late 1980s off-site work was expanded to include water and sanitation projects, through which KRCH facilitated the installation of six gravity-fed village water systems. 

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Half Century Milestone

In February 2010, KRCH celebrated its 50th anniversary of ministry to the least. The anniversary began with a worship service at Sangkla Christian Church attended by representatives of the Church of Christ in Thailand, members of the hospital board, former directors of the hospital, hospital staff and former patients, and an evening celebration included a banquet on the front lawn of the hospital with Thai classical dancers and Mon folk dances in tribal costumes. 

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The following doctors have been directors of the hospital over the course of its history:

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