Displaying publications 101 - 120 of 167 in total

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  1. Catterall RA
    Family Practitioner, 1977;2:78-79.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  2. Lau BWK
    Family Practitioner, 1988;11(1):48-52.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  3. Lau BWK, Chung JTC, Young DYN
    Family Practitioner, 1988;11:31-36.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  4. Lee BS
    Family Practitioner, 1975;2:18-24.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  5. Lam ES
    Family Practitioner, 1978;3:30-31.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  6. Phua KH, Jeyaratnam J
    Family Practitioner, 1986;9(1):31-34.
    Ultimately, the majority of our medical graduates ends up in primary health care either in private practice or in the government service. It would be appropriate that their education and training should meet not only the requirements of their eventual vocation, but just as importantly, the expectations of a more discerning community at large. Rising pressures on the profession to provide more cost-effective and affordable health services of good quality would put an increasing emphasis on the development and promotionof primary health care to higher standards. Primary health care workers would be hard-pressed to provide more health information and to actively participate in disease prevention and control as part of their professional duties. As medical specialisation and technology contibute towards more fragmented, complex and dehumanising forms of practice, the greater will be the need for the integrative skills of the primary physician providing personal and continuing care. The future nature of medical care will have to respond to this community demand.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  7. Param Palam S
    Family Practitioner, 1973;1(1):9-12.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  8. Param Palam S
    Family Practitioner, 1977;2:94-99.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  9. Chua WT
    Family Practitioner, 1985;8(2):57-62.
    One hundred and twenty-four women from a semi-urban area who came for consultation for unplanned pregnancy during an eight month period are analysed. It is found that women with a high risk of unplanned pregnancy are mostly housewives, aged between 20 and 34, who have given birth to one or three children, the last of whom is usually below one or two years old. They belong to the lower socio-economic class and are lowly-educated. Most of them have not completed their families. Although most of them have either used or heard of contraceptives begore, the majority were not using any contraceptive at the time of consultation or were using an ineffective method. Their reasons for non-use or default are identified, many of which are related to the pill. Proper motivation of would-be contraceptive receptors and regular follow-up of acceptors by general practitioners or Family Planning Clinic Staff who are knwoledgable in all available methods of contraception are offered as a solutionto the problem of high rate of defaulting and consequent high rate of unplanned pregnancies.
    Study site: private general practice clinic, Perak, Malaysia
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  10. Chung SF
    Family Practitioner, 1983;6:51-56.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  11. Chua WT
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(1):65-76.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  12. Low BT
    Family Practitioner, 1975;2:2-4.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  13. Balasundaram R
    Family Practitioner, 1982;5(2):15-18.
    312 diabetics were seen in a multiracial urban general practice in Peninsular Malaysia during a five-year period. Of these, 210 (67%) were Indians, confirming the higher prevalence of diabetes among Indians reported in other studies. 67 were newly found diabetics. The sex, age, family history, of the diabetics, duration and complications of diabetes, are reviewed and compared with similar studies. The larger number of diabetics may partly be attributed to the presence in the community of a large number of Indians born in India. Stress also may contribute to the high prevalence of the disease in Indians, who are prone to diabetes by virtue of heredity.
    Study site: General practice clinic, Kelang, Selangor, Malaysia
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  14. Awin N
    Family Physician, 2003;12(1):2-7.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  15. Gururaj Aithala K
    Family Physician, 1989;1:26-28.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  16. George E, George R, Ilina I, Yasmin AM, Faridah K
    Family Physician, 1989;1:37-41.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  17. Hee WJ
    Family Physician, 1994;6:49-49.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
  18. Md Shajahan MY
    Family Physician, 1994;6:3-3.
    Matched MeSH terms: Family Practice
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