Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 699 in total

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  1. Delilkan AE, Sachithanandan T, Lim SW
    Med J Malaysia, 1977 Jun;31(4):347-8.
    PMID: 927244
    Matched MeSH terms: Education, Medical, Continuing/trends*
  2. Yeoh OH
    Med J Malaysia, 1979 Dec;34(2):167-70.
    PMID: 548722
    This study show that within a general hospital outpatient setting, the prescription of psychotropic medication is mainly confined to the anti-anxiety drugs and and secondarily to the hypnotics. There is a conspicuous absence of prescription for antipsychotic drugs and negligible use of antidepressants. The use of anti-anxiety drugs and hypnotics was higher in the general outpatient clinic than in the psychiatric outpatient clinic in the same hospital. This finding is in the trend of similar findings by others that non-psychiatrists prescribe more psychotropic medication including an-anxiety and hypnotic medication. In this study the use of psychotropic medication for patient generated psychiatric symptomalogy was only in 14.5% of cases prescribed these medication. The anti-anxiety drugs were prescribed as adjuncts in non-psychiatric conditions as well. Frequent use as adjuncts were in the treatment of muscular tension and in chronic cardiovascular disorders. There is a core of patients (20%) that had been continuously prescribed medication up to a period of 5 years. Half of these were chronic cardiovascular patients and half presented with no demonstrable systemic organicity. None had been referred to psychiatrist.
    Study site: Outpatient clinic, general hospital, Malaysia
    Matched MeSH terms: Outpatient Clinics, Hospital/trends*
  3. Chen PC
    Am J Chin Med, 1979;7(3):259-75.
    PMID: 506989
    Malaysia has a large variety of traditional medical systems that are a direct reflection of the wide ethnic diversity of its population. These can be grouped into four basic varieties, namely, traditional "native," traditional Chinese, traditional Indian and modern medicine, examples of which are described. In spite of the great inroads made by modern medicine, the traditional systems are firmly established. Patients move from one system to another or use several systems simultaneously. The integration of the traditional Malay birth attendant into the health team is described. The forces influencing the development, acceptance and integration of the medical systems is discussed.
    Matched MeSH terms: Health Services/trends*; Health Services, Indigenous/trends
  4. Golański J
    Wiad Lek, 1980 Jan 1;33(1):67-8.
    PMID: 7368743
    Matched MeSH terms: Health Services Needs and Demand/trends; Public Health/trends*
  5. Buhrich N
    Aust N Z J Psychiatry, 1980 Dec;14(4):299-304.
    PMID: 6945096
    Matched MeSH terms: Mental Health Services/trends*
  6. Catterall RD
    Br J Vener Dis, 1981 Dec;57(6):363-6.
    PMID: 6895709
    Despite being part of one of the few remaining primitive areas of the world, both Sabah and Sarawak are provided with adequate, though simple, urban and rural general medical services. At present no reliable data on the incidence of sexually transmitted diseases in these areas have been collected and no organised treatment services are available. Gonorrhoea appears to be the commonest notifiable infectious disease in Sarawak, and beta-lactamase-producing strains have been isolated. Because of the rapidly expanding economy and the encouragement of the tourist trade, sexually transmitted disease is likely to prove an increasing problem, for which a specialised service for diagnosis and treatment is badly needed.
    Matched MeSH terms: Health Services/trends
  7. Parameshvara Deva M, Kumara Deva M
    Med J Malaysia, 1981 Dec;36(4):259-62.
    PMID: 7334966
    Matched MeSH terms: Child Care/trends*
  8. Chandrasekharan N
    Med J Malaysia, 1982 Sep;37(3):197-204.
    PMID: 7176996
    Matched MeSH terms: Clinical Laboratory Techniques/trends*
  9. Crowdy JP, Consolazio CF, Forbes AL, Haisman MF, Worsley DE
    Hum Nutr Appl Nutr, 1982 Oct;36(5):325-44.
    PMID: 7141879
    As part of a research programme concerned with the need to lighten the load carried by soldiers engaged in long foot patrols, a field experiment was undertaken in West Malaysia. For 12 d a group of 15 men consumed 7.4 MJ/d (1770 kcal/d) whilst a control group of 14 men ate 12.9 MJ/d (3080 kcal/d); both groups expended on average about 15.8 MJ/d (3770 kcal/d). The low-energy group incurred an energy deficit of 98 MJ (23 410 kcal) with a weight loss of 3.9 kg, whereas corresponding figures for the control group were 37 MJ (8840 kcal) and 2.4 kg. Before, during and after the energy deprivation phase, assessment was made of work capacity (estimated VO2 max), vigilance and military skills but no difference was found between the groups.
    Matched MeSH terms: Military Medicine/trends*; Tropical Medicine/trends*
  10. Thuraisingham V
    Med J Malaysia, 1982 Dec;37(4):296-7.
    PMID: 7167077
    Matched MeSH terms: Education, Medical/trends
  11. Lopez CG
    Malays J Pathol, 1983 Aug;6:1-7.
    PMID: 6599863
    Matched MeSH terms: Blood Banks/trends
  12. Nicks R
    Med J Aust, 1983 Nov 26;2(11):578-9.
    PMID: 6633393
    Matched MeSH terms: Education, Medical/trends*; Hospital Administration/trends
  13. Soins Pathol Trop, 1983 Mar-Apr.
    PMID: 6552756
    Matched MeSH terms: Maternal Health Services/trends*; Midwifery/trends*
  14. Chandrasekharan N
    Med J Malaysia, 1984 Mar;39(1):1-4.
    PMID: 6513835
    Matched MeSH terms: Health Priorities/trends
  15. Delilkan AE
    Med J Malaysia, 1984 Jun;39(2):101-2.
    PMID: 6513848
    Matched MeSH terms: Anesthesiology/trends*
  16. Harlan WR, Harlan LC, Oii WL
    J Public Health Policy, 1984 Dec;5(4):563-72.
    PMID: 6526940
    Matched MeSH terms: Health Policy/trends*
  17. Manderson L
    Soc Sci Med, 1984;18(1):47-57.
    PMID: 6695200 DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(84)90343-5
    Traditionally, Malaysian women (Malay, Indian and Chinese) breastfed their infants as a matter of course and for an extended period of time; only elite Chinese women might have resorted to a wet-nurse. But the introduction of condensed and dehydrated milk in colonial Malaya from the late nineteenth century, and the later marketing also of commercially manufactured baby foods, led to some variation in traditional practice. Structural changes, industrialiZation and urbanisation affected social as well as economic life, and again these broad changes had an impact on infant feeding. Today, few women remain unfamiliar with the wide range of infant food products sold in the most isolated provision shops. This paper focuses on key sociological factors that might predict the frequency and duration of breastfeeding and weaning patterns. The data analysed below, collected during semi-structured interviews with 278 women presenting at Maternal and Child Health Clinics in Peninsular Malaysia, are in part confusing. They suggest that the women most likely to bottle feed only or to breast feed for a short period, and to use commercial baby foods, are young, with one child only, who reside in urban or peri-urban areas and have a reasonable household income. Higher educated women, and women whose husbands are in non-traditional occupations, are also less likely to breast feed or to do so for an extended period. But the profile of infant feeding practices is by no means clear. One of the shortcomings of the study relates to the method of collection of data, and highlights the need for detailed ethnographic studies to better explore the variability and complexity of the patterns of infant feeding.
    Matched MeSH terms: Bottle Feeding/trends*
  18. Roundy RW
    Soc Sci Med, 1985;20(3):293-300.
    PMID: 3975696
    The decade of the 1980s is declared as a time to solve global domestic water supply problems. By 1990 international goals include the provision of adequate quantities of clean water to every person on earth. Such goals are justified on the basis of human health, economic well being, political development and equity and public safety. Drawing upon observations from Ethiopia, Malaysia and Liberia, cases where attempts to provide domestic water to villagers and rural town dwellers are presented. In all cited cases attempts to provide safe water have failed or are in jeopardy. Conclusions drawn from these cases include acknowledgement that global goals will best be achieved by approaching local problems one-by-one and recognizing the technical, environmental and human constraints upon safe water provision interact differently from one site to another. To properly plan, implement and maintain safe water systems the current technical solutions must be combined with the contributions of social and environmental scientists on a case-by-case basis.
    Matched MeSH terms: Communicable Disease Control/trends; Rural Health/trends*; Sanitation/trends
  19. Bentsen BG
    Scand J Prim Health Care, 1986 Feb;4(1):43-50.
    PMID: 3961309 DOI: 10.3109/02813438609013970
    "Health for all by year 2000" was the subject of the WHO Conference at Alma-Ata in 1978. It was evident that good primary care was a requirement to reach this goal. However, knowledge about this was scanty, and the instrument, an acceptable classification for analyses of primary care, was lacking. Since 1978 a WHO Working Party on Classifications of Primary Care has been working on a Reason for Encounter Classification. A RFEC test form was produced. In 1983 a feasibility study was conducted in nine countries: Australia, Barbados, Brazil, Hungary, Malaysia, The Netherlands, Norway, the Philippines, and the USA. The results of this were changing the original proposal very much. In addition, the WONCA/WHO Classification of Health Problems in Primary Care was included in the final version. In 1984 this final version was accepted by WONCA Classification Committee. This is called ICPC = The International Classification of Primary Care. ICPC is biaxial with the chapters of organ/organ systems along the one axis, in addition of three chapters: General, Mental, and Social problems. The other axis comprises seven components: Complaints, Process and Diagnosis. An alphanumeric code is used. The feasibility study of RFEC comprised ten test sites, and 138 primary care professionals recorded a total of 100 452 reasons for encounter. The English version of the RFEC was translated into five other languages, and these versions were used during the study. ICPC is a comprehensive, simple and practicable classification which can be used in medical records and in different areas of primary care research.
    Matched MeSH terms: Health Priorities/trends; Primary Health Care/trends*; Referral and Consultation/trends
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