Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 141 in total

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  1. LLEWELLYN-JONES D
    Med J Malaya, 1954 Jun;8(4):330-6.
    PMID: 13193270
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period*
  2. MACAFEE CH
    Med J Malaysia, 1963 Jun;17:274-81.
    PMID: 14060504
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period*
  3. BROWNE AD
    Med J Malaysia, 1963 Jun;17:306-15.
    PMID: 14060509
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period*
  4. LOURDENADIN S
    Med J Malaysia, 1963 Jun;17:269-73.
    PMID: 14060503
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period*
  5. LLEWELLYN-JONES D
    Med J Malaysia, 1964 Mar;18:212-4.
    PMID: 14157188
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period*
  6. ENG LL, DEWITT G
    Med J Malaysia, 1964 Jun;18:269-75.
    PMID: 14199445
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period*
  7. Sinnathuray TA, Wong WP
    Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol, 1972 May;12(2):122-5.
    PMID: 4509097
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period
  8. Har Kok Kee
    Midwives Chron, 1972 Aug;86(15):249.
    PMID: 4484243
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period
  9. Kuah KB
    Med J Malaya, 1972 Dec;27(2):81-4.
    PMID: 4268044
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period
  10. Rosenfield AG
    Med Today, 1973;7(3-4):80-94.
    PMID: 12309877
    PIP: Organizational and content features of various national family planning programs are reviewed. The Thai program is cited as an example of a family planning program organized on a massive unipurpose compaign basis. The Korean and Taiwan programs have utilized special field workers while upgrading the general health care network. 3 major problems with family planning programs are: 1) the lack of experience with such programs; 2) lack of commitment at the highest political levels; and 3) medical conservatism. Utilization of all available contraceptive methods instead of reliance on 1 method would improve most programs. Nursing and auxiliary personnel could be trained to take over the work of physicians in family planning programs. This is already being done with IUD insertion and pill prescription in several programs. The postpartum tubal ligation approach has proven effective and should be extended. There is a place in all national programs for both the private and the commercial sectors. Incentives for clinics, personnel, and acceptors might spread family planning more rapidly.
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period
  11. Rajakumar MK
    Family Practitioner, 1977;2:67-68.
    Preliminary findings of a survey on the influences of institutional facilities on mothers in the post-partum period in hospital that affect breast-feeding were reported. It was observed that although advice on breast-feeding is now given, there is a conflict between advice and practice so that the advice has been ritualistic. There is a lack of follow-up on advice, and the mother is not helped and encouraged to breast-feed and to overcome her initial disappointment and difficulties. It was also pointed out that the artificial milk-food industry exercises a negative influence through maternity ward staff by provision of milk samples to maternity units and by visits of their sales staff to the mothers. It was emphasised that the hospital factor could be an important cause of failure of the mother to breast-feed.
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period
  12. Netw Res Triangle Park N C, 1981 Apr;2(3):1-2.
    PMID: 12281266
    PIP:
    The International Fertility Research Program is carrying out several studies focused on breastfeeding's contraceptive protection. A longitudinal study is investigating the relationship between breastfeeding and the return of ovulation and fertility after childbirth. The impact of factors such as the early introduction of supplementary foods, resumption of menses, and sexual practices on the return of ovulation will be analyzed. The study, which will be conducted at 4 geographic sites, will include a total of 100 women who are breastfeeding and a control group of 40 nonlactating mothers. Its ultimate goal will be to determine the optimum time for breastfeeding women with different cultural needs to start using contraceptives. A second study will seek to determine whether progestogen-only oral contraceptives (OCs) have advantages for lactating women. Trials in India, Malaysia, Argentina, and Egypt will compare 1000 lactating women who use progestogen-only OCs with an equal number of women who use nonhormonal contraception in terms of contraceptive acceptance and side effects and infant weight gain. The third study will survey breastfeeding patterns in relation to changing child spacing trends in a sample of 4000 women from Lagos, Nigeria. Analyzed will be the proportions of women who are using a modern method of fertility control, the proportions protected from unwanted pregnancy by the traditional practices of prolonged breastfeeding and sexual abstinence, and determinants of recent changes in the prevalence and duration of breastfeeding.
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period*
  13. Rajikin MH, Abdullah R, Arshat H, Satgunasingam N
    Med J Malaysia, 1982 Mar;37(1):72-5.
    PMID: 6981751
    Serum human prolactin (hPRL) levels in Malay women during pregnancy, intrapartum and immediately postpartum have been invest£gated by means of a double-antibody radioimmunoassay technique. There was a progressioe rise of serum prolactin concentration from 31.9 ± 10.4 ng/ml in the first trimester to 242.0 ± 24.6 ng/ml at 36 weeks pregnancy unth. the mean values during the second and third trimester of 118.9 ± 12.7 ng/ml and 214.7 ± 10.3 ng/ml respectively. During intrapartum the concentration of hPRL was 191.9 ± 26.9 ng/ml and ithat of immediately postpartum was 178.3 ± 14.5 ng/ml. Suckling of the breast within 6 hours postpartum has resulted in a minor elevation of prolactin level, and this could have been due to the greater basal prolactin level, and/or the ineffectiveness of suckling as a potent stimulus during this period.
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period
  14. Rajikin MH, Abdullah R, Hamid Arshat
    Med J Malaysia, 1983 Dec;38(4):311-4.
    PMID: 6599989
    Serum prolactin (hPRL) levels in nonpregnant, pregnant and postpartum women during sleep were investigated. The study showed that in non-pregnant women, there is an immediate shift of hPRL release with reversal of sleeping period. Thus, the nocturnal surge for prolactin is sleep related. In pregnant women, however, while there is an increase in hPRL level during pregnancy, the nocturnal rise of this hormone is not detected and this is observed as early as the first trimester of pregnancy.
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period/blood
  15. Kader HA
    Malays J Reprod Health, 1984 Dec;2(2):105-10.
    PMID: 12280340
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period*
  16. Laderman C
    Soc Sci Med, 1987;25(4):357-65.
    PMID: 3686085 DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(87)90274-7
    Malaya, an ancient crossroads of trade, was the recipient of Chinese and Ayurvedic humoral ideas and, later, those of medieval Islam. These ideas were readily accepted by Malays, since they are highly congruent with pre-existing notions among aboriginal peoples of Malaya involving a hot-cold opposition in the material and spiritual universe and its effects upon human health. Islamic Malays have adapted these aboriginal beliefs to correspond to the Greek-Arabic humoral model in matters concerning foods, diseases, and medicines. Although Malay theories of disease causation include such concepts as soul loss and spirit attack, along with 'naturalistic' ideas such as dietary imbalance and systemic reactions to foods, all of these theories can either be reinterpreted in humoral terms, or, at least, are congruent with the basic tenets of Islamic humoral pathology. Behaviors and beliefs regarding human reproduction, however, while essentially following a humoral pattern, diverge from Islamic, as well as traditional Chinese and Indian Ayurvedic, humoral theories. Unlike any other major humoral doctrine, Malay reproductive theory (like that of non-Islamic aboriginal peoples of Malaya) equates coldness with health and fertility and heat with disease and sterility. These ideas, in turn, are related to beliefs regarding the nature of the spirit world: the destructiveness of spiritual heat and the efficacy of cooling prayer.
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period
  17. Kit LK, Janet G, Jegasothy R
    J Obstet Gynaecol Res, 1997 Feb;23(1):85-9.
    PMID: 9094824
    OBJECTIVE: To determine the incidence of postnatal depression of Malaysias women at 6 week postpartum and a survey of their sociocultural practices.

    METHODS: A hundred and fifty-four women who were 6 weeks postpartum attending the postnatal clinic between May and July 1995 at Maternal and Child Health Clinic, Seremban, Malaysia. Maternal socio-demography, depression by Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), postnatal care and practices e.g. pantang larang (prohibited behaviour and practices), diet and partnering were evaluated.

    RESULTS: Postnatal depression was 3.9%. Indians had the highest rate at 8.5% as compared to Malays (3.0%) and none in Chinese (p < 0.05). There were no demographic differences in the study groups. Average score of EPDS was 4.05 which ranged from 0 to 20. During the confinement 85.7% of women took special diet; 64.3% followed pantang larang and 78.8% had someone to look after them. The incidence of postnatal depression is low in Malaysia at 3.9%. Majority of Malaysian women still observed the traditional postnatal beliefs and practices.

    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period/psychology*
  18. Pang MF, Ling SG
    JUMMEC, 2000;5(1):24-27.
    A descriptive study of full-term neonates with jaundice was carried out to determine factors affecting severity of neonatal jaundice for those infants presenting to the hospital from their homes. Severe jaundice (serum bilirubin >=250 µmol/l) was significantly more likely in infants whose mothers consumed traditional herbs during the postpartum period (p<0.001) and if the jaundice was first detected by the parents or relatives rather than by medical personnel (p<0.05). In addition, the interval between detection of jaundice and presentation to hospital was significantly longer in jaundice that was first detected by parents compared to those detected by medical personnel. In conclusion, factors affecting severity of neonatal jaundice for infants who present from home could be influenced by the socio-cultural practices of maternal postpartum use of herbs, the ability of parents to detect jaundice and the urgency of tlie parents in seeking medical treatment once the jaundice was detected. Further studies need to be done to explore the association of these factors with neonatal jaundice more specifically. KEYWORDS: Hyperbilirubinaemia, socio-cultural practices, herbs.
    Study site: Paediatric Institute, Kuala Lumpur Hospital, Malaysia
    Matched MeSH terms: Postpartum Period
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