Browse publications by year: 1967

  1. Kumaradeva M
    Med J Malaya, 1967 Jun;21(4):326-36.
    PMID: 4230500
    MeSH terms: Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Male; Pneumonia*
  2. Poopalasingam T
    Med J Malaya, 1967 Jun;21(4):337-43.
    PMID: 4230501
    MeSH terms: Adult; Amphotericin B/therapeutic use; Humans; Male; Meningitis*
  3. Sambhi JS
    Med J Malaya, 1967 Jun;21(4):344-51.
    PMID: 4230502
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Female; Humans; Malaysia; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Ectopic/epidemiology*
  4. Nissom MP, Schmidt KE
    Med J Malaya, 1967 Jun;21(4):352-7.
    PMID: 4230503
    MeSH terms: Mental Disorders*; Humans; Magic*; Malaysia
  5. Tan DS
    Med J Malaya, 1967 Jun;21(4):358-61.
    PMID: 4230504
    MeSH terms: Humans; Infectious Mononucleosis/epidemiology*; Malaysia; European Continental Ancestry Group; Asian Continental Ancestry Group
  6. Buttery JE, de Witt GF, Ahmad UO
    Med J Malaya, 1967 Jun;21(4):362-5.
    PMID: 4230505
    MeSH terms: Blood Glucose/analysis*
  7. Stark RB
    Plast Reconstr Surg, 1967 Jun;39(6):541-8.
    PMID: 6025681
    MeSH terms: Education, Medical, Continuing; Humans; International Cooperation; Malaysia; Medical Missions, Official*; Surgery, Plastic*; Tunisia; Vietnam
  8. Thompson B, Baird D
    J Obstet Gynaecol Br Commonw, 1967 Jun;74(3):329-38.
    PMID: 6026612
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Borneo; Female; Gambia; Hong Kong; Humans; Malaysia; Nigeria; Pregnancy; Prenatal Care*; Scotland
  9. Saw SH
    Demography, 1967 Jun;4(2):641-56.
    PMID: 21318676 DOI: 10.2307/2060305
    During the early postwar years up to 1957, the three main races in Malaya - Malays, Chinese, and Indians - experienced some differences in their levels of fertility. The lowest fertility was recorded among the Malays, with Chinese and Indian fertility about 5 percent and 10 percent higher, respectively. The comparatively low fertility of the Malays was owing to the exceptionally high rate of divorce, which meant unstable marriages and shorter periods of exposure to the risk of childbearing.A fairly well-defined pattern of state differences in fertility levels is found to exist in Malaya. Briefly, fertility was on the high side in the northern states of Johore, Malacca, and Negri Sembilan, and on the low side in the northern states of Penanq, Kelantan, Perlis, Kedah, and Trengganu, with the central states of Perak, Selangor, and Pahang in the intermediate position.The usual rural-urban fertility differentials are seen to prevail in Malaya as a whole and in the smaller units at state levels. Finally, the three main races registered higher fertility in rural areas, and the greatest gap between rural and urban rates prevailed among the Chinese.
    MeSH terms: Divorce; Fertility; Humans; Malaysia; Marriage; Risk; Rural Population
  10. Saw SH
    Demography, 1967 Jun;4(2):859-75.
    PMID: 21318696 DOI: 10.2307/2060325
    The first section of this paper is devoted to an analysis of some theoretical aspects of the Chinese system of reckoning ages, and the second section offers a method of collecting the age statistics of a Chinese population: A discussion of the errors found in the age returns and the unsuccessful measures taken to eradicate these errors in the Malayan censuses conducted prior to1957 leads to an appraisal of the method of collecting Chinese age data in the 1957 census.
    MeSH terms: Biometry; Data Collection; Demography; Censuses
  11. Tan DS, Smith CE, McMahon DA, Bowen ET
    Nature, 1967 Jun 10;214(5093):1154-5.
    PMID: 4964058
    MeSH terms: Animals; Insect Vectors*; Insect Viruses/isolation & purification*; Malaysia; Neutralization Tests; Rodentia; Ticks*; Virus Cultivation; Viruses*; Mice; Rats
  12. Rohde K
    Z Tropenmed Parasitol, 1967 Jul;18(2):152-61.
    PMID: 5628712
    MeSH terms: Animals; Cat Diseases/epidemiology; Cats; Diet; Ecology; Fishes; Humans; Malaysia; Mammals; Opisthorchiasis/epidemiology*; Opisthorchiasis/veterinary; Opisthorchis*; Paragonimiasis/epidemiology*; Paragonimiasis/veterinary; Paragonimus*; Shellfish; Snails
  13. Jayaratnam FJ, Seah CS, Da Costa JL, Tan KK, O'Brien W
    Br Med J, 1967 Jul 01;3(5556):18-20.
    PMID: 6027375
    MeSH terms: Aged; Anemia, Pernicious/diagnosis*; Anemia, Pernicious/drug therapy; Anemia, Pernicious/epidemiology*; Bone Marrow Examination; Female; Hemoglobinometry; Humans; Malaysia; Male; Middle Aged; Schilling Test; Vitamin B 12/blood; Vitamin B 12/therapeutic use; Asian Continental Ancestry Group
  14. Leow HM
    J Am Optom Assoc, 1967 Jul;38(7):579-81.
    PMID: 6043834
    MeSH terms: Humans; Malaysia; Optometry*; Singapore
  15. Thompson B, Baird D
    J Obstet Gynaecol Br Commonw, 1967 Aug;74(4):499-509.
    PMID: 6033270
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Birth Weight*; African Americans; Blood Pressure; Body Height; Body Weight; Edema; Female; Hong Kong; Humans; Infant, Newborn; Labor, Obstetric; Malaysia; Maternal Age; Nigeria; Pre-Eclampsia/epidemiology*; Pregnancy; Proteinuria; Retrospective Studies; Scotland; Social Conditions; Tropical Climate*; African Continental Ancestry Group; European Continental Ancestry Group; Asian Continental Ancestry Group
  16. Thompson B, Baird D
    J Obstet Gynaecol Br Commonw, 1967 Aug;74(4):510-22.
    PMID: 6033271
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; African Americans; Cesarean Section; Extraction, Obstetrical; Female; Fetal Death; Hong Kong; Humans; Infant Mortality; Infant, Newborn; Labor, Obstetric*; Obstetric Labor Complications/epidemiology; Labor Presentation; Malaysia; Maternal Age; Medicine, Traditional; Nigeria; Obstetrics; Pregnancy; Retrospective Studies; Scotland; Tropical Climate*; Delivery, Obstetric; African Continental Ancestry Group; European Continental Ancestry Group; Asian Continental Ancestry Group
  17. Nadchatram M, Upham RW
    J Med Entomol, 1967 Aug 10;4(3):376-9.
    PMID: 6052149
    MeSH terms: Animals; Arachnida/classification*; Malaysia
  18. Eng LI, Bolton JM, Fudenberg HH
    Nature, 1967 Aug 12;215(5102):777.
    PMID: 4168452
    MeSH terms: gamma-Globulins*; Haptoglobins*; Humans; Malaysia; Transferrin*; Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  19. Jones LW
    Popul Stud (Camb), 1967 Sep;21(2):133-57.
    PMID: 22085038 DOI: 10.1080/00324728.1967.10405470
    Abstract The Murut tribe of Sabah (formerly North Borneo) numbered 30,300 in 1921, decreased to 18,700 in 1951, and increased again to 22,100 in 1960. In 1951, the tribe was a small diminishing section of a slowly growing population; in 1960 it was increasing itself, and the growth rate of the whole population had shot up. Marked variations in the age structures of the Murut and other indigenous tribes accompanied these changes. Between 1920 and 1960 several investigators attempted to explain the decline, but could not show why only one tribe was failing to hold its own among many others which were increasing. Their findings are summarized, and unpublished data from the 1960 census are given which suggest that increasing contacts with the rest of the population, earlier thought to be an important contributor to the decline, were probably the means of saving the Murut from extinction.
    MeSH terms: Malaysia
  20. Wiesenfeld SL
    Science, 1967 Sep 08;157(3793):1134-40.
    PMID: 6038684
    The particular agricultural adaptation we have been considering is the ultimate determinant of the presence of malaria parasites in the intracellular environment of the human red blood cell. This change in the cellular environment is deleterious for normal individuals, but individuals with the sickle-cell gene are capable of changing their red-cell environment so that intense parasitism never develops. Normal individuals suffer higher mortality rates and lower fertility rates in a malarious environment than individuals with the sickle-cell trait do, so the latter contribute proportionately more people to succeeding generations.
    MeSH terms: Africa, Eastern; Africa, Western; Agriculture*; Anemia, Sickle Cell/epidemiology*; Anopheles; Computers; Environment; Genetics, Population*; Humans; Insect Vectors; Malaria*; Malaysia; Models, Theoretical; Tropical Climate
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