Forty nine patients with sick sinus syndrome seen at the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur are reviewed. The ages of patients ranged from 17 to 85 years. There were 21 males and 28 females. The diagnostic criteria were sinus bradycardia in 8 patients (Group I), sinus arrest or sinoatrial block in 24 patients. (Group Il), and bradycardia tachycardia syndrome in 17 patiens (Group Ill). The aetiology was unknown in the majority of patients. Ischaemic heart disease was the commonest known aetiological factor. Patients with symptomatic sinus bradycardia and sinus arrest were initially treated with oral isoprenaline, and if this failed, they were paced. Temporary transvenous pacing was necessary in 27 patients and subsequent permanent pacing performed on 23 patients.
A survey showed only 27% of our house-officers know how to intubate. Ninety-two percent however recognise the alternative to intubation. On the whole, knowledge centering around intubation is generally lacking.
Enterobacteriaceae isolated from clinical sources were examined for antibiotic resistance and the ability to transfer resistance to Escherichia coli. Twenty-nine out of 80 strains tested transferred part or all oftheir resistance genes. The strains carrying R plasmids included the genera Escherichia, Klebsiella, Salmonella, Enterobacter, Proteus, Providencia and Citrobacter. These results indicate that R plasmids possibly play a major role in the emergence of antibiotic resistance among clinical isolates of Enterobacteriaceae.
The present paper reviews the health problems of rural agricultural workers in Malaysia. As is common with most developing countries, the agricultural sector forms the pillar of the national economy in Malaysia, the major products being rubber, palm oil, rice and timber. Most of the agricultural workers, who form the largest occupational group in the country, live in the rural areas under poor socioeconomic and environmental conditions. Their general health problems include large families, substandard housing, overcrowding, lack of piped water supply and sanitary excreta disposal, malnutrition and prevalent diseases such as cholera, typhoid, dysentery and parasitic infections. The specific occupational health problems include infectious diseases, agricultural accidents, pesticide poisonings, physical hazards, keratitis nummularis and snake-bites. The organization of agricultural health services in developing countries is also discussed.
It has been suggested that the 'ideal' measure of reliability of an examination is obtained by test and retest using the one examination on the same group of students. However, because of practical and theoretical arguments, most reported reliabilities for multiple choice examinations in medicine are actually measures of internal consistency. While attempting to minimize the effects of potential interfering factors, we have undertaken a study of true test-retest reliability of multiple true-false type multiple choice questions in preclinical medical subjects. From three end-of-term examinations, 363 items (106 of 449 from term 1, 150 of 499 from term 2, and 107 of 492 from term 3) were repeated in the final examination (out of 999 total items). Between test and retest, there was little overall decrease in the percentage of items answered correctly and a decrease of only 3.4 in the percentage score after correction for guessing. However, there was an inverse relation between test-retest interval and decrease in performance. Between test and retest, performance decreased significantly on 33 items and increased significantly on 11 items. Test-retest correlation coefficients were 0.70 to 0.78 for items from the separate terms and 0.885 for all items that were retested. Thus, overall, these items had a very high degree of reliability, approximately the 0.9 which has been specified as the requirement for being able to distinguish between individuals.
31 cases of ocular toxoplasmosis were seen at the Ophthalmology Clinic, Uniuersiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur during a one-and-a-half year period. All these cases were diagnosed as congenital ocular toxoplasmosis. As this condition appears not to be uncommon in. Malaysia, greater effort should be made towards its prevention especially among pregnant women.
Study site: Ophthalmology Clinic, Pusat Perubatan Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (PPUKM)
The belief that it is unwise to alter the initial response to a multiple choice question is questioned. Among 39 380 MCQ responses, there were 1818 changes (4.62%) of which 21.9% were correct to incorrect responses, 46.3% incorrect to correct responses and 31.8% incorrect to incorrect. This effect was very much more marked among the better students, incorrect to correct changes accounting for 61% of the responses in the upper group, 42% in the middle group and 34% in the lower group.