Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 224 in total

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  1. Nyuak L, Dunn E
    Anthropos, 1906.
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion
  2. OMAR W
    Med J Malaya, 1958 Dec;13(2):187-90.
    PMID: 13632220
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion*
  3. Hannah HB
    Br J Anaesth, 1971 Oct;43(10):991-3.
    PMID: 5115036
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion and Medicine
  4. Rosenbloom AL
    JFMA, 1972 Apr;59(4):37-43.
    PMID: 4555905
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion and Medicine
  5. Hartog J
    Soc Sci Med, 1972 Apr;6(2):211-20.
    PMID: 5063780
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion
  6. Sreenivasan BR
    Med J Malaya, 1972 Sep;27(1):2-9.
    PMID: 4264821
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion and Medicine
  7. Keeny SM
    Stud Fam Plann, 1974 May;5(5):174-6.
    PMID: 4828075 DOI: 10.2307/1965310
    PIP: Observations are made related to the review of family planning activities in East Asia in 1973. The number of new acceptors for the region increased from 2.7 million in 1972 to 3.4 million in 1973. The leaders were Indonesia, which almost doubled its achievement of calendar year 1972, the Philippines, and Korea. In Thailand, the number of new acceptors dropped by about 10%. South Vietnam is the only country in the region without an official policy. Most couples still think that the ideal number of children is 4, with at least 2 sons. Some religious opposition does exist, particularly with reference to sterlization and abortion. More attention is being paid to women in their 20s. Sterilization and condoms are becoming more popular. Korea reports a sharp increase in vasectomies. Better methods and continuation rates should be stressed. In Taiwan a couple who start with 1 method and continue to practice some method lower their reproduction rate by 80%. More responsibility is being delegated to nurses and midwives, but too slowly. In Indonesia, the number of field workers rose from 3774 in 1972 to 6275 in 1973. The Philippines and Thailand are experimenting to see what kind of workers get best results and under what kind of salary and incentive arrangements. In-service training tends to be neglected, but preservice training is improving. Costs, in general, have risen, though in Korea the cost per acceptor has dropped from US$8.00 to US$7.80. Korea and Taiwan have reduced their annual population growth rates by more than 1/3 in 10 years, from 30 to 19-20 per 1000 each. Singapore's rate is 17 and Hong Kong's 14 (exclusive of inmigration). The number of couples currently practicing contraception in Singapore is 71%. Target systems assigning quotas to clinics are generally used except in Thailand and Malaysia, where programs emphasize maternal and child health, rather than population planning. Most programs require about 10 years to get the annual growth rate down to 2% by voluntary family planning. To get it down to 1.5% will probably take another 10 years.
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion
  8. Teoh JI, Soewondo S, Sidharta M
    Psychiatry, 1975 Aug;38(3):258-68.
    PMID: 1197502
    This paper discusses the prevalence and characteristics of epidemic hysteria among predominantly rural Malay schools in Malaysia. An illustrative episode in a Malay residential girls' school is described, and contributory factors to this outbreak are elaborated. An attempt is made to analyze the complex interweaving of psychological, religious, cultural, and sociological factors in the precipitation of the outbreak.
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion and Psychology
  9. Dauth J
    Nurs J Singapore, 1978 May;18(1):61-3.
    PMID: 250740
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion and Medicine*
  10. Hosken F
    WIN News, 1978;4(4):39-44.
    PMID: 12335629
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion*
  11. Tinker H
    Dev Dig, 1979 Oct;17(4):116-24.
    PMID: 12336016
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion*
  12. Cohen Y
    Med J Malaysia, 1984 Sep;39(3):210-9.
    PMID: 6544922
    The article was presented at the A.M. Ismail Oration, 26 May 1984, Kuala Lumpur.
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion
  13. Husain R, Duncan MT, Cheah SH, Ch'ng SL
    Br J Nutr, 1987 Jul;58(1):41-8.
    PMID: 3620437
    1. Anthropometric variables, resting heart rate and respiratory gas exchange were measured in twelve male and nine female Asiatic adult Moslems during the month of Ramadan, the week before and the month after Ramadan. 2. Energy intakes were estimated from dietary recall during fasting and non-fasting conditions. 3. Both male and female subjects experienced a decrease in body mass with the reduction in energy intake during fasting. Males experienced a greater reduction than females in resting heart rate; females lost more body-weight and subcutaneous fat than males. 4. Urine output and fluid intake were measured in twelve male subjects for 1 d during each week of fasting and 1 d during the pre-fasting control period. Among the subjects examined, the Ramadan regimen did not result in changes in the pattern of fluid exchange.
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion*
  14. Maniam T
    Med J Malaysia, 1987 Dec;42(4):317-9.
    PMID: 3454406
    Traditional methods of treatment are extremely popular with Malaysians especially for psychiatric illnesses. Those who seek such treatment come from all cultures, social classes and different educational levels in this country. In one hospital as much as 49% of psychiatric patients had been to traditional healers . Some receive simultaneously traditional and modern modes of treatment. While many reports have been written on traditional healers such as the bomoh and spirit mediums, relatively less is written about Christian healers who practise exorcism. This paper describes two patients who had received psychiatric diagnoses of major illnesses, and who subsequently underwent Christian exorcism. The process of exorcism and the short-term and long-term outcome are reported.
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion and Medicine*
  15. Duza MB
    Popul Sci, 1987;7:1-30.
    PMID: 12315536
    "The present paper attempts to provide an analytical profile of development and human resources in [12] selected [Islamic] countries." The countries--Bangladesh, Somalia, Pakistan, Indonesia, Egypt, Turkey, Malaysia, Algeria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and United Arab Emirates--vary in income levels from low to high and in population size from 1 million to 159 million. Using data from the World Bank and the Population Council, comparisons are made on the basis of mortality and fertility levels, family size, income, urbanization, labor force size and growth, education, nutrition, and health. Governmental policy changes and future directions are discussed.
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion
  16. Rachapaetayakom J
    Popul Manag, 1988 Dec;2(2):18-27.
    PMID: 12282180
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion
  17. Annu Rev Popul Law, 1988;15:66.
    PMID: 12289651
    This Islamic Family Law Enactment of Pahang, Malaysia, is based on the model of the Islamic Family Law (Federal Territory) Act, 1984 (Annual Review of Population Law, Vol. 11, 1984, Section 250). It differs from that Law in the following major respects: 1) marriages between Muslims and non-Muslims are prohibited; 2) a wali Hakim (special guardian appointed by the Sultan) is authorized to consent to marriage if the wali (guardian) of the bride unreasonably withholds consent; 3) the grounds for divorce are fewer (failure to maintain and cruelty being omitted), although there is a general provision allowing divorce for any ground that is recognized as valid by Islamic law; 4) a son is to be maintained until the age of 15, not 18; and 5) a religious court, rather than a civil court, may order a putative father to maintain his illegitimate child.
    Matched MeSH terms: Religion
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