1: The clinic I've chosen is the one you have listed. I highly doubt these are the only orthopedic surgeons in this very large city, but I think this is the only one that caters to a foreign market in this city. Dr. Thuy has retired and it is now Dr. Quynh. The doctor has moved to a more upscale hospital from the one I visited in June, though the doctor and everything else remains the same.
2: I have consulted with other doctors via email, but had not actually visited them in person. I was going to visit the doctor in Thailand, but two things prevented that: he was busy while I was there, and he was out of my price range anyway IIRC.
3: Pricing is $12,600 per segment. It's pretty much all-inclusive, but figure at least $13k to account for flight, food, hotel, prior to getting the surgery, especially if you want an in-person consultation.
4: The only patient I ever knowingly talked to is the one from the thread that everyone was dubious about. He says that he turned out alright, and I'm inclined to believe him. He was athletic prior to surgery, so I'm guessing that helped his outcome.
Regarding FDR101, I don't know how it is with Paley, et al, and how they do things doesn't affect me, because I can't afford them anyway. While I'm at it, why don't I complain about my Toyota Prius because it can't do things $100k cars can do. The point I'm trying to make is that this is my option. I want the surgery done in a time frame that I can live with, because with graduate school and medical school coming up, I am not getting rich any time soon. The time to act is now, and if the doctor wants to take x-rays the day of the surgery, so be it. Yes, maybe it is a risk, but being looked down upon both physically and metaphorically, is something I don't want in my life any more. I'm not proud of the lack of confidence I feel when females are taller than me. I'm not proud of being uncomfortably conscious of the fact that I'm the shortest among my friend group. Yes, here in Vietnam, I'm a good height. Back in the US, I'm not. And I don't want this height problem undermining my confidence until I'm 50 and I can finally afford someone who does things different. So, is this standard practice in Vietnam? I guess so, but I have months of millimeter by millimeter lengthening for both him and I to figure out what length is ideal. So, whether it happen tomorrow morning, or 5 months ago, it doesn't really matter until those frames are on my legs.
Also, I've decided on LON because that is his standard practice. And if that is the case, then I will go with what he has the absolute most experience with. This doctor is in a legit hospital, and has "normal" patients in addition to the onesies and twosies like me, so I have a feeling he isn't a fly-by-night operation, follows the Hippocratic Oath, and probably cares about the outcome of his patients. I hope. Everything so far suggests that this is the case.