Browse publications by year: 1982

  1. Ho TM
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(1):99-101.
    MeSH terms: Family Practice
  2. Ho TM
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(3):76-78.
    MeSH terms: Family Practice
  3. Goh CS
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5:78-78.
    MeSH terms: Hong Kong; Physicians; Physicians, Family; General Practitioners
  4. Goh CS
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5:65-66.
    MeSH terms: Occupational Health
  5. David CV, Pathmanathan R
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5:33-34.
    MeSH terms: Malaysia; Wounds and Injuries
  6. Daljit SN
    Family Practitioner, 1982;<I>5 </I>:21-26.
    MeSH terms: Eczema
  7. Chua WT, Lim CH
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(3):49-53.
    Oil palm estates and associated industries employ a fair proportion of workers. Good medical care benefits both the employers and the employees. The pattern of illness is not very different from that found in general practice. However, certain environmental factors, the nature of occupation and the water supply can influence the increased incidence of certain diseases. Upper respiratory tract infection, acute gastroenteritis, contact dermatitis (eczemas & rashes) eye, and ear diseases, injuries and musculoskeletal diseases are the commonest causes of morbidity. The resident doctor, who has a good knowledge of the environment of his patients is in the best position to practise preventive medicine or early intervention, thereby reducing illnesses and improving productivity of the workers.
    MeSH terms: Dermatitis; Ear Diseases; Eczema; Gastroenteritis; Malaysia; Morbidity; Musculoskeletal Diseases; Primary Health Care; Wounds and Injuries
  8. Chua WT
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(2):19-24.
    MeSH terms: Diabetes Mellitus; Humans
  9. Chua WT
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(1):65-76.
    MeSH terms: Family Practice; Skin Diseases
  10. Chew SS
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5:27-30.
    MeSH terms: Acne Vulgaris
  11. Cheong IKS
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(1):81-82.
    MeSH terms: Biopsy; Humans
  12. Cheah JS, Yeo PPB
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5:6-10.
    MeSH terms: Diabetes Mellitus
  13. Balasundaram R
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(2):15-18.
    312 diabetics were seen in a multiracial urban general practice in Peninsular Malaysia during a five-year period. Of these, 210 (67%) were Indians, confirming the higher prevalence of diabetes among Indians reported in other studies. 67 were newly found diabetics. The sex, age, family history, of the diabetics, duration and complications of diabetes, are reviewed and compared with similar studies. The larger number of diabetics may partly be attributed to the presence in the community of a large number of Indians born in India. Stress also may contribute to the high prevalence of the disease in Indians, who are prone to diabetes by virtue of heredity.
    Study site: General practice clinic, Kelang, Selangor, Malaysia
    MeSH terms: Ambulatory Care Facilities; Cross-Sectional Studies; Diabetes Mellitus; Ethnic Groups; Family Practice; Humans; Malaysia; Private Practice; Prevalence
  14. Balasundaram R
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(2):37-45.
    MeSH terms: Diabetes Mellitus; Family Practice
  15. Adam BA
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(1):7-10.
    MeSH terms: Humans; Skin Diseases*
  16. Teoh GH, Yow CS, Gong NC
    Singapore Med J, 1982 June;23(3):181-3.
    PMID: 7146924
    A case of sarcoidosis involving the eye is reported and its significance discussed.
    MeSH terms: Adult; Case Reports; Eye Diseases; Hospitals, University; India/ethnology; Malaysia; Male; Sarcoidosis*
  17. Ong SB, Lam KL, Lam SK
    Bull World Health Organ, 1982;60(1):137-40.
    PMID: 6282479
    The results of this study indicate that the important viral agents associated with lower respiratory tract infections in young children are respiratory syncytial virus, rhinovirus, and parainfluenza virus, particularly in those under 2 years of age. This is in close agreement with studies done in temperate climates. Influenza A virus is seasonal and plays an important role in upper respiratory tract infections in older children.
    Study site: Inpatients and outpatients, University Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
    MeSH terms: Acute Disease; Child; Child, Preschool; Hospitals, University; Humans; Infant; Inpatients; Malaysia; Outpatient Clinics, Hospital; Respiratory Syncytial Viruses/isolation & purification; Respiratory Tract Infections/microbiology*; Rhinovirus/isolation & purification; Viruses/isolation & purification*; Respirovirus/isolation & purification
  18. Manderson L
    Int J Health Serv, 1982;12(4):597-616.
    PMID: 6754637 DOI: 10.2190/0A5U-GCC6-V4BU-28T5
    Considerable attention has been paid to the correlation between high infant morbidity and mortality rates and the increased incidence of bottle feeding. The shift from prolonged breast feeding to a mixed regime or the exclusive use of sweetened condensed milk or infant formula has been related to the promotional activities of milk companies, and typically has been presented as a relatively recent development in Third World countries. However, the marketing of tinned and powdered milk only partially explains the increased use of these products. In colonial Malaya, condensed milk was marketed from the late 19th century. Infant formula was available from the turn of the century and was widely advertised, first in the English-language press and later also in the vernacular presses. At the same time, other social and cultural factors served to discourage breast feeding. There were changes in ideas regarding ideal body weight for both women and infants, and regarding infant care and diet; these ideas were presented in the mass media. In addition, maternal and child health clinics, established in the 1920s to reduce the high infant mortality rate, both propagated popular beliefs about infant weight and supplied milk and educated women to artificially feed their infants. Industry, the media, and health services all promoted, if not always intentionally, bottle feeding rather than breast feeding. Bottle feeding as an ideal, if not a reality, was thus well established before the intensive promotion of milk products by multinational corporations that followed the political independence of the colony.
    MeSH terms: Advertising as Topic/history; Bottle Feeding*; Humans; Infant Food/supply & distribution*; Infant Mortality; Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena*; Infant Welfare; Infant, Newborn; Malaysia; History, 19th Century; History, 20th Century
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