Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 37 in total

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  1. Palmore JA, Hirsch PM, Ariffin Bin Marzuki
    Demography, 1971 Aug;8(3):411-25.
    PMID: 4950540 DOI: 10.2307/2060629
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services
  2. Spencer C, Navaratnam V
    Drug Alcohol Depend, 1980 Nov;6(5):315-22.
    PMID: 7460763
    Although those Malaysian secondary schoolchildren who have never used drugs are consistent in their support for legal and social sanctions against drug use, it is argued that such sanctions are a relatively unimportant factor in the decision whether or not to use drugs. Non-drug users inhabit a social world separated from their drug-using contemporaries; they rely on information from public rather than direct social sources, and claim to have been little interested in information received. However, there is evidence that, for a minority of the drug-using sub-sample, public information campaigns have made them more rather than less interested in experimenting with drug substances.
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services
  3. Noor Laily Abu Bakar, Tan BA, Tey NP, Yusuf Y
    Malays J Reprod Health, 1983 Dec;1(2):109-19.
    PMID: 12313333
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  4. Barnard B
    UFSI Rep, 1983.
    PMID: 12339664
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  5. United Nations. Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific ESCAP. Population Division, United Nations. Department of International Economic and Social Affairs. Population Division. International Population Information Network POPIN
    POPIN Bull, 1984 Dec.
    PMID: 12267292
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  6. Pasquariella SK
    POPIN Bull, 1984 Dec.
    PMID: 12267287
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  7. Adnan MH
    Media Asia, 1987;14(4):194-203.
    PMID: 12281076
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  8. Karel SG, Robey B
    Asian Pac Cens Forum, 1988 Sep;2(1-2):1-4, 18-30.
    PMID: 12342138
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  9. Lent JA
    Media Asia, 1989;16(1):16-24.
    PMID: 12315828
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  10. Hassan Y
    Ann Pharmacother, 1993 Sep;27(9):1134-8.
    PMID: 8219450 DOI: 10.1177/106002809302700920
    OBJECTIVE: To report on the current status and future trends of clinical pharmacy practice in Malaysia.
    DATA SOURCES: Published conference reports and journal articles.
    DATA EXTRACTION: Data on areas related to clinical pharmacy practice in Malaysian hospitals were gleaned from various publications.
    DATA SYNTHESIS: Malaysia is capable of implementing clinical pharmacy services in hospitals and perhaps also in the community setting. The important factors in clinically oriented pharmacy practice include improvement of the drug-control process, development of physical and human resources, clinical pharmacy skills, and the training of practicing pharmacists. A number of Malaysian pharmacists have already developed a unit-dose drug distribution system, patient counseling, therapeutic drug monitoring, drug information, and total parenteral nutrition services.
    CONCLUSIONS: The pharmacy profession in Malaysia has many challenges ahead and it is hoped that every practicing pharmacist will be highly committed to future professional needs so that clinical pharmacy practice in Malaysia becomes a reality.
    Matched MeSH terms: Drug Information Services/trends
  11. Dzulkifli AR, Aishah AL, Ch'ng HS, Rose A, Rahmat A, Isa AM, et al.
    J Audiov Media Med, 1994 Jul;17(3):117-20.
    PMID: 7636117
    A number of health databases is now available in Malaysia, but few are accessible to the general public. However, recently a service was launched nationwide via a videotex system to also target the Malaysia public. This service is provided by the School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) in collaboration with several Malaysian Government ministries and agencies. Access to health information via videotex, be it medical, pharmaceutical or environmental is viewed as an effective means of on-line information dissemination. It provides not only rapid retrieval but is also economical and interactive, particularly suitable for a developing country.
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services/organization & administration*
  12. PMID: 12288741
    PIP: The great deal of documentation which was prepared for the recent TSS/CST Population IEC (information, education, and communication) meeting from research, field experiments, and action projects will be useful to TSS/CST advisors and individual countries undertaking IEC and population education work. This article summarizes the 12 sessions held during the open forum. To illustrate some of the latest trends in population and health communication, the "enter-educate" approach and use of the interactive computer software called SCOPE (Strategic Communication Planning and Evaluation) were discussed. Next, ways in which to apply research effectively in IEC and population education were considered. Examples were provided of 1) a workshop methodology used to help a multidisciplinary group design a problem-solving communication strategy in Malaysia and Dominica; 2) the counseling training evaluation technique based on the GATHER (greet, ask, tell, help, explain, and return for follow-up) model; and 3) four types of evaluation of population education in schools. The third session was concerned with the program approach used in IEC and population education. Session 4 dealt with the implication of UNFPA support to family planning (FP) IEC. Counseling skills training and interpersonal communication were next on the agenda, followed by a consideration of how knowledge and policies are applied in the area of youth. The seventh session concentrated on ways to involve men in FP and reproductive health and included a discussion of a case study on the attitude and behavior of men with regard to FP which had IEC implications. The next session described the need to reconceptualize population education and what such a reconceptualization would entail. Session 9 was devoted to a consideration of gender issues and the education of girls. The tenth session covered the use of participatory approaches and community involvement in population communication programs. Innovative methodologies for school-based population education were described next, and the last session was concerned with new information technologies such as navigating the Internet and using new software for establishing databases.
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  13. JOICFP News, 1996 Feb.
    PMID: 12290712
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  14. JOICFP News, 1997 Jan.
    PMID: 12292051
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  15. JOICFP News, 1997 Jan.
    PMID: 12292050
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  16. JOICFP News, 1997 Oct.
    PMID: 12292743
    Matched MeSH terms: Information Services*
  17. Ab Rahman AF, Budiarti LE
    J Clin Pharm Ther, 1998 Apr;23(2):127-31.
    PMID: 9786098
    To determine how nurses handled drug-related questions in the work environment of a teaching hospital in Malaysia and the type of information sources they used.
    Matched MeSH terms: Drug Information Services*
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