• 제목/요약/키워드: Malaysian patients

검색결과 49건 처리시간 0.026초

Quality of Life by Stage of Cervical Cancer among Malaysian Patients

  • Azmawati, Mohammed Nawi;Najibah, Endut;Ahmad Zailani Hatta, Mohd Dali;Norfazilah, Ahmad
    • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
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    • 제15권13호
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    • pp.5283-5286
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    • 2014
  • Stage of cervical cancer may adversely affect the quality of life (QOL) among patients. The objective of this study was to predict the QOL among cervical cancer patients by the stage of their cancer. A cross-sectional study from September 2012 until January 2013 was conducted among cervical cancer patients who completed treatment. All patients completed a interviewer-guided questionnaire comprising four sections: (A) socio-demographic data, (B) medical history, (C) QOL measured by general health status questionnaire (QLQ-30) and (D) cervical cancer specific module CX-24 (EORTC) was used to measured patient's functional, symptom scale and their global health status. Results showed that global health status, emotional functioning and pain score were higher in stage III cervical cancer patients while role functioning was higher in stage I cervical cancer patients. Patients with stage IV cancer have a lower mean score in global health status (adjusted b-22.0, 95 CI% -35.6, -8.49) and emotional functioning (adjusted b -22.5, 95CI% -38.1, -6.69) while stage III had lower mean score in role functioning (adjusted b -14.3, 95CI% -25.4, -3.21) but higher mean score in pain (adjusted b 22.1, 95 CI% 8.56, 35.7). In conclusion, stage III and IV cervical cancers mainly affect the QOL of cervical cancer patients. Focus should be given to these subgroups to help in improving the QOL.

Pilot Study of the Sensitivity and Specificity of the DNA Integrity Assay for Stool-based Detection of Colorectal Cancer in Malaysian Patients

  • Yehya, Ashwaq Hamid;Yusoff, Narazah Mohd;Khalid, Imran A.;Mahsin, Hakimah;Razali, Ruzzieatul Akma;Azlina, Fatimah;Mohammed, Kamil Sheikh;Ali, Syed A.
    • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
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    • 제13권5호
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    • pp.1869-1872
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    • 2012
  • Background: To assess the diagnostic potential of tumor-associated high molecular weight DNA in stool samples of 32 colorectal cancer (CRC) patients compared to 32 healthy Malaysian volunteers by means of polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Methods: Stool DNA was isolated and tumor-associated high molecular weight DNA (1.476 kb fragment including exons 6-9 of the p53 gene) was amplified using PCR and visualized on ethidium bromide-stained agarose gels. Results: Out of 32 CRC patients, 18 were positive for the presence of high molecular weight DNA as compared to none of the healthy individuals, resulting in an overall sensitivity of 56.3% with 100% specificity. Out of 32 patients, 23 had tumor on the left side and 9 on the right side, 16 and 2 being respectively positive. This showed that high molecular weight DNA was significantly (p = 0.022) more detectable in patients with left side tumor (69.6% vs 22.2%). Out of 32 patients, 22 had tumors larger than 1.0 cm, 18 of these (81.8%) being positive for long DNA as compared to not a single patient with tumor size smaller than 1.0 cm (p <0.001). Conclusion: We detected CRC-related high molecular weight p53 DNA in stool samples of CRC patients with an overall sensitivity of 56.3% with 100% specificity, with a strong tumor size dependence.

Perceptions of Malaysian Colorectal Cancer Patients Regarding Dietary Intake: A Qualitative Exploration

  • Yusof, Afzaninawati Suria;Isa, Zaleha Md.;Shah, Shamsul Azhar
    • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
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    • 제14권2호
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    • pp.1151-1154
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    • 2013
  • Background: Changes in dietary practices are known to be associated with changes in the health and disease pattern of a population. This study aimed to qualitatively explore the perception of colorectal cancer patients regarding causes of colorectal cancer and the influence of diet. Materials and Methods: Twelve respondents from three major ethnicities in Malaysia were selected from the quantitative study on dietary pattern and colorectal cancer carried out earlier in this study. In-depth interviews (IDI), conducted from April until June 2012, were mainly in the Malay language with additional use of English and continued until the saturation point was reached. All interviews were autorecorded so that verbatim transcriptions could be created. Results: Causes of colorectal cancer were categorized into internal and external factors. The majority of respondents agreed that there is an association between Western foods and colorectal cancer. Malaysian traditional diet was not related to colorectal cancer as less preservative agents were used. Malaysian diet preparation consisting of taste of cooking (spicy, salty and sour foods) plus type of cooking (fry, grilled and smoked) were considered causes of colorectal cancer. All respondents changed their dietary pattern to healthy food after being diagnosed with colorectal cancer. Advice from doctors regarding suitable food for colorectal cancer was useful in this regard. Conclusions: Eating outside, use of food flavoring ingredients and preservative agents were considered to be the main factors causing colorectal cancer. All respondents admitted that they changed to a healthy diet after being diagnosed with colorectal cancer.

국내외 산업장 근로자의 AIDS(Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome)예방교육을 위한 소고 (Studies on AIDS(Acquired Immune Defficiency Syndrome) Preventive Educational Programs Intended for Domestic and Foreign Industrial Workers)

  • 정문희;조정민
    • 한국보건간호학회지
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    • 제10권1호
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    • pp.12-22
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    • 1996
  • Currently. exchanges of industrial workers between countries are more active than ever. and the problem of AIDS in connection with the operation of preventive educational programs has reached a point where the issue cannot be limited to native people alone any more. Based on such judgement. this research has been carried out to provide basic study materials by grasping the latent factors representing the difference between countries in the levels of right knowledge. attitude and behavior with respect to AIDS maintained by workers who have grown in different social and cultural living background. During the period from Apr. 1. 1995 to Jun. 30. questionnaires. written both in Korean and English, were distributed to Korean and Malaysian employees working at certain Korean video manufacturers. and the results of replies. given by 80 workers who were analyzed through matched sampling· method where ages and sex matched by country. were used as the research materials. The gathered materials were analyzed through the SPSS package t-test. ANOVA. factor analysis and multiple stepwise regression methods. and the following results were obtained. 1. The 2 extracted latent factors could be named 'common. social' knowledge factor and 'in-depth. psychological' knowledge factor respectively. 2. The percentile points of 'external. social' knowledge factor. in the case of Korean workers. howed 90.0 at average. a figure 13.75 points higher than those of Malaysian workers. 76.25. On the other hand. the percentile points of the 'in-depth. psychological'knowledge factor showed 70.80 at average in the case of Korean workers. a figure 7.47 points lower than those of Malaysian workers. 78.33. Meanwhile. the difference in percentile points between the 2 latent factors was 8.54 at average. indicating that the points of 'in-depth. psychological' knowledge factor was lower than those of the 'external. social' knowledge factor. 3. As for Korean workers. the percentile points of the 'in-depth. psychological' knowledge factor showed higher points in office workers than in non-office workers. and such variables exhibited in the position of workers can explain the $7\%$ of the latent factor. The percentile points of the 'in-depth. psychological' knowledge factors. in the case of Malaysian workers. showed higher points in groups who had religion than in groups who did not. and higher points in groups who obtained information from newspapers than in groups who obtained from televisions or other sources; and with these 2 variables. $26\%$ of this latent factor can be explained. The results. of analysis described so far suggest that while Korean workers possessed general level of knowledge on AIDS. they had low level of practical knowledge as far as its depth is concerned. and that they had social prejudice on patients as well as on the AIDS infection route. In addition. because the overall knowledge level of Malaysian workers. is lower than that of Korean workers. it suggests that separate programs intended for Malaysian workers are required prior to executing integrated programs.

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An Empirical Study on Traditional, Complementary and Alternative Medicine Usage among Malaysian Cancer Patients

  • Nagashekhara, Molugulu;Murthy, Vasudeva;Mruthyunjaya, Anil Tumkur;Ann, Lim Li
    • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
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    • 제16권15호
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    • pp.6237-6241
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    • 2015
  • Usage of traditional, complementary and alternative medicine (TCAM) has gained popularity over the past few years. However, very little is known about TCAM use among Malaysian cancer patients. This study aimed to identify the determinants of TCAM usage among cancer patients with determination of relationships between demographic factors, patient satisfaction with conventional treatment, knowledge on TCAM and healthcare professional influence. Patient's perceptions towards TCAM were also determined. A simple random convenient sampling method was used to recruit 354 patients from Hospital Kuala Lumpur between February to April 2013. All were directly interviewed with a structured questionnaire. In this study, 172 respondents were TCAM users. There was no significant differences between demographic background of respondents in the usage of TCAM. Minimal correlation was found between patient satisfaction with the conventional treatment and usage of TCAM (r=0.091). A poor correlation was found between healthcare professional's influence and TCAM usage (r=-0.213) but the results suggested that increase in influence would decrease TCAM usage. Patient TCAM knowledge correlated negatively with the TCAM usage (r=-0.555) indicated that cancer patients are less likely to use TCAM when they have more TCAM knowledge. Healthcare professionals should be fully equipped with the necessary TCAM knowledge while maintaining patient satisfaction with the conventional treatment. They should also intervene on patient TCAM usage where a potential drug interaction or a harmful adverse event can occur.

말레이시아 1개 병원과 병상규모가 유사한 한국의 병원 간 보건정보관리자 직무 비교연구 (Comparative Research on the Health Information Manager(HIM) Duties of One Malaysian Hospital and Similar Scale Korean hospitals)

  • 김혜경;이현주
    • 한국산학기술학회논문지
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    • 제15권10호
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    • pp.6158-6167
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    • 2014
  • 본 연구는 말레이시아 병원과 유사규모의 한국 병원을 대상으로 보건정보관리자(HIM)의 새로운 역할 7가지에 대한 직무를 비교연구하기 위한 것이다. 말레이시아 병원은 272병상 규모의 종합병원을 선정하였다. 말레이시아는 해당병원을 연구자가 직접 방문하여 담당자 면담 등을 실시하였고 기간은 2013년 7월 22일부터 8월 2일까지 약 2주간이었다. 국내병원은 말레이시아와 병상규모가 유사한 병상대의 종합병원 총 13곳을 대상으로 유선 상 질의응답을 통해 확인하였다. HIM의 새로운 7가지 역할에서는 Health information manager로서 말레이시아 병원은 ICT가, 한국 병원은 조사대상 병원의 30.8%가 역할을 수행하고 있었다. Clinical data specialist역할 관련 classification of disease & procedure는 양국 모두 실시하고 있었고 tumor registry은 말레이시아 병원은 담당하고 있었던 반면 한국 병원에서는 15.4%만이 담당하고 있었다. 퇴원환자 통계는 말레이시아에서는 담당하지 않았고 한국은 76.9%에서 담당하고 있었다. 특수질환 등록업무는 한국은 22.1%에서 담당한 반면 말레이시아는 전체 법정전염병 등록 뿐 아니라 병원출생아와 사망자에 대한 정보등록까지 실시하고 있었다. 그 외 Patient Information Coordinator, Data Quality Manager, Document and Repository Manager, Research and Decision Support Analyst 역할은 양국 모두에서 실시하고 있지 않았다. HIM의 새로운 역할은 한국 중소병원에서 실천률이 낮은 편이다. 따라서 한국전체에서 HIM 역할이 확고히 정립되려면 중소규모 병원까지도 그 역할을 잘 수행할 수 있도록 해당 협회차원의 지속적인 교육, 지원을 통해 일부 대형병원뿐 아니라 중소병원을 포함한 전체 병원에서 역할이 명확화 될 수 있는 노력이 필요하다. 특히 특수질환 등 등록업무는 말레이시아 병원이 한국 병원에 비해 역할이 잘 정립되어 있어 이를 벤치마킹하여 업무를 확대하는 방안도 모색할 필요가 있다고 사료된다.

Knowledge and Perceptions of Cancer and Cancer Prevention among Malaysian Traditional Healers: a Qualitative Study

  • Al-Naggar, Redhwan A.;Bobryshev, Yuri V.;Abdulghani, Mahfoudh Al-Musali Mohammed;Rammohan, Subramanian;Al-Jashamy, Karim
    • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
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    • 제13권8호
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    • pp.3841-3850
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    • 2012
  • Objective: The objective of this study was to explore the knowledge and perceptions of Malaysian tradition healers towards cancer and cancer prevention. Methodology: A total of 25 participants agreed to participate in this qualitative study during the period from $20^{th}$ July 2011 until $24^{th}$ of September 2011. The proposal of this study was approved by the Ethics Committee of Management and Science University (MSU). Once the participant agreed to be interviewed, date, time and place of the interviews were determined. Consent form was obtained from participants before the interview began. Participants were briefed about the study and its purpose, and after asking their permissions, their replies were recorded. The data was organized into themes and analyzed manually. Results: Twenty-five Malaysian traditional healers participated in this qualitative study. The age of participants ranged between 26 to 78 years old. The majority were in the age group of 31-60 years old, male, Chinese, degree holders with a monthly income ranging from 1,000-5,000 Ringgit Malaysia (RM) and were married (56%, 80%, 48%, 52%, 68%, 84% respectively). The majority defined cancer as having high cholesterol or abscess accumulation. A few of them defined cancer as a type of cell growth. The majority mentioned that food and unhealthy lifestyles are the primary causes of cancer. Surprisingly some of them mentioned that cancer is caused by interference by ghosts. Regarding the diagnosis of cancer, the majority mentioned that they refer their patients to modern physicians' medical report when it comes to diagnosing or treating patients with cancer. The most common cancers that many patients came to seek treatment were breast cancers, followed by colon cancers, liver and lung cancers. Conclusions: Despite good knowledgeabout the causes of cancer among traditional healers, misconceptions still exist. Insufficient knowledge about the definition of cancer was noted among the traditional healers. This urges immediate action by the Ministry of Health of Malaysia to set up a strict regulation and regular monitoring of the traditional healers nationally. Traditional and Complementary Medicine may be integrated into the healthcare system and need to have sustained cooperation for the benefit of patients since about 80% of patients use traditional medicines.

Diagnosis and Management of Patients with Mucopolysaccharidoses in Malaysia

  • Ngu, Lock-Hock
    • Journal of mucopolysaccharidosis and rare diseases
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    • 제4권1호
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    • pp.11-13
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    • 2018
  • In Malaysia, diagnosis and treatment of patients with mucopolysaccharidoses (MPS) is mainly localized at Hospital Kuala Lumpur, which is the national referral center for rare diseases. To date there are 83 patients diagnosed with MPS in our center, with MPS II being the commonest. The Malaysian National Medicines Policy second edition has a specific section on the orphan drugs which includes recombinant human enzyme for enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) in MPS. So far, National Pharmaceutical Regulatory Agency Malaysia has approved recombinant human enzyme for MPS types I (Loranidase), II (idursulfase), IVA (elosulfase alfa), and VI (Galsufase). Access to Idursulfase beta (another recombinant human enzyme for MPS II) and vestronidase alfa-vjbk (MPS VII) required special authorization on named patient basic. Currently there are 25 patients receiving ERT, 70% of the funding are from Ministry of Health (MOH), the remaining 30% are from various charitable funds and humanitarian programs. Thirteen newly diagnosed patients have to queue for an additional fund. Four patients have been treated with Hematopoietic stem cell transplant. MOH has also published guidelines regarding the patient selection criteria for ERT and treatment monitoring schedule.

Survival Rate of Breast Cancer Patients In Malaysia: A Population-based Study

  • Abdullah, Nor Aini;Mahiyuddin, Wan Rozita Wan;Muhammad, Nor Asiah;Ali, Zainudin Mohamad;Ibrahim, Lailanor;Tamim, Nor Saleha Ibrahim;Mustafa, Amal Nasir;Kamaluddin, Muhammad Amir
    • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
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    • 제14권8호
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    • pp.4591-4594
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    • 2013
  • Breast cancer is the most common cancer among Malaysian women. Other than hospital-based results, there are no documented population-based survival rates of Malaysian women for breast cancers. This populationbased retrospective cohort study was therefore conducted. Data were obtained from Health Informatics Centre, Ministry of Health Malaysia, National Cancer Registry and National Registration Department for the period from $1^{st}$ January 2000 to $31^{st}$ December 2005. Cases were captured by ICD-10 and linked to death certificates to identify the status. Only complete data were analysed. Survival time was calculated from the estimated date of diagnosis to the date of death or date of loss to follow-up. Observed survival rates were estimated by Kaplan-Meier method using SPSS Statistical Software version 17. A total of 10,230 complete data sets were analysed. The mean age at diagnosis was 50.6 years old. The overall 5-year survival rate was 49% with median survival time of 68.1 months. Indian women had a higher survival rate of 54% compared to Chinese women (49%) and Malays (45%). The overall 5-year survival rate of breast cancer patient among Malaysian women was still low for the cohort of 2000 to 2005 as compared to survival rates in developed nations. Therefore, it is necessary to enhance the strategies for early detection and intervention.

Colorectal Cancer and its Association with the Metabolic Syndrome: a Malaysian Multi-Centric Case-Control Study

  • Ulaganathan, V.;Kandiah, M.;Zalilah, M.S.;Faizal, J.A.;Fijeraid, H.;Normayah, K.;Gooi, B.H.;Othman, R.
    • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
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    • 제13권8호
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    • pp.3873-3877
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    • 2012
  • Objective: Colorectal cancer (CRC) and the metabolic syndrome (MetS) are both on the rise in Malaysia. A multi-centric case-control study was conducted from December 2009 to January 2011 to determine any relationship between the two. Methods: Patients with confirmed CRC based on colonoscopy findings and cancer free controls from five local hospitals were assessed for MetS according to the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) definition. Each index case was matched for age, gender and ethnicity with two controls (140: 280). Results: MetS among cases was highly prevalent (70.7%), especially among women (68.7%). MetS as an entity increased CRC risk by almost three fold independently (OR=2.61, 95%CI=1.53-4.47). In men MetS increased the risk of CRC by two fold (OR=2.01, 95%CI, 1.43-4.56), demonstrating an increasing trend in risk with the number of Mets components observed. Conclusion: This study provides evidence fora positive association between the metabolic syndrome and colorectal cancer. A prospective study on the Malaysian population is a high priority to confirm these findings.