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RESIDENCE

Centro Hospitalario Padre Menni

Santander, Cantabria3.1/ 5

Sobre esta residencia

En la Fundación Hospitalarias Cantabria somos especialistas en salud mental y atendemos a personas mayores y con discapacidad intelectual.

Información de contacto

Santander, 39012 Cantabria

Servicios

  • Psicología
  • Cuidados paliativos

Titularidad

Private

Opiniones

El Centro Hospitalario Padre Menni recibe opiniones altamente polarizadas: mientras algunos usuarios destacan la excelente atención psiquiátrica y el profesionalismo de ciertos médicos, especialmente en casos de emergencia, otros reportan experiencias muy negativas que incluyen medicación excesiva, trato inadecuado del personal, falta de camas disponibles y prácticas que consideran antiéticas. Las críticas más severas cuestionan la gestión general del centro, la calidad de la atención psiquiátrica y el comportamiento de algunos miembros del equipo, aunque se reconoce positivamente el trabajo de

  • Fanny Ardila Pardo

    Quiero expresar mi más sincero agradecimiento por la excelente atención recibida en este Centro, especialmente a la Doctora Raquel Machado-Psiquiatra. Es una profesional muy cercana, empática y con una gran capacidad para escuchar y comprender la situación del paciente. Gracias a su experiencia y criterio, logró acertar con el tratamiento adecuado, lo que ha supuesto una mejora muy significativa en mi bienestar y calidad de vida; desde el primer momento transmite confianza, profesionalidad y un verdadero compromiso con la salud de sus pacientes. Sin duda la recomiendo totalmente a cualquier persona que esté buscando una Psiquiatra humana y altamente competente. Muy agradecida por su dedicación y el gran trabajo que realiza.

  • Raquel Díez Machado

    I am Raquel Díez Machado, and since you have mentioned me, I will respond to your statements. It's curious that two patients I saw more than two years ago seem to have conspired against each other. In psychiatry, patients often come under pressure from their families or by court order. This explains why they experience the intervention negatively. I wish the patient a speedy return to society. Likewise, as in all medical fields, we must deliver news that is unpleasant and requires introspection or an effort that frightens the patient. In such cases, accusatory and dramatic reactions from patients are to be expected. Wishing them a speedy recovery. Sincerely, Raquel Díez Machado

  • JL M

    This hospital complex mixes mentally ill patients of all kinds with elderly people. It's a psychogeriatric center. The so-called social center consisted of a rather shabby cafeteria and a real smoking area. A very unpleasant experience. The staff is so diverse that it creates confusion if one is sick. You rarely see a psychiatrist, nor are patients seen by a professional, with a predominance of assistants performing their duties as best they can. In short, a very unpleasant and sordid environment in which to recover from a mental illness. If medicine deserves a certain amount of respect here, one aspect of it, psychiatry, ceases to deserve it.

  • José Antonio

    I'm with MUFACE Adeslas, and I went to the emergency room yesterday. Luckily, I got Raquel Diez Machado; if it weren't for my wife, I'd be dead today. Right away, she told me I had to be admitted to the ward... Then, when I went to check if I'd be admitted... the response was, "There are no beds available in the ward..." She wrote me a report stating I have a level 2 personality disorder and many other things, and I said, "What's this? This assessment in 30 minutes? She doesn't know me or my wife at all." I beg you to fire her immediately. Don't go there under any circumstances, and especially not alone, because you might end up in a dangerous situation. Best regards.

  • Adhara González

    Hi, I've been going there since I was 15. The best thing about that hospital is when you leave. They've done a thousand inappropriate things to me, considering I was a patient who never caused any problems or bothered anyone. 1. They took me to geriatrics when I was 19, deceiving me and my mom, because my best friend was on the ward I was supposed to be on, and they suspected we were a couple. But of course, it was perfectly fine if there were male-female couples in any unit. 2. They drugged me to the point where I ended up in a coma, convulsing from the overdose. 3. The restraints I witnessed left me with trauma that was diagnosed later in pediatrics. They're violent, unpleasant, and insensitive, and not the patient's fault. 4. If an orderly like María (the blonde one) wants to break you down and lie on the report, you can bet she'll do it. If they send you to dinner from Valdecilla but say, "It's past lunchtime, I'll give you a yogurt," she thinks it's perfectly fine. 5. I got extremely sick one night. When I went to tell the night shift, she was on the phone with her friend, gossiping. I called multiple times, morning and night... I ended up in the ward. And when I returned, Eva, the head of the unit, had the nerve to reprimand me in front of everyone (which wasn't allowed, was it, Eva? Or was it okay with me?) because I chose to have watermelon instead of yogurt for dessert. 6. They drug you until you're completely out of it, they lie to your family about the medication, etc. 7. They don't know how to manage you if you have more than one disorder. 8. Juan and Vanessa, the best psychiatrists I've ever had, didn't last long there, as they told me their ethics didn't align with the hospital. So who are you left with, Hubbert and Raquel? One of them gives you pills without even knowing what's going on, and the other is an incompetent woman who had the nerve to call me lazy for trying to get rid of me and not having the energy to study in the coming days? Please, it's ridiculous and harmful. Thanks to Jean, Nicoleta, Raquel the assistant, and Ana, because without them I would have gotten rid of myself in there. A huge hug to everyone who has trauma from that place.