1.Trend of Stillbirths and Neonatal Deaths in University Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre (UKMMC) From 2004-2010
Haslina Hassan ; Rosnah Sutan ; Nursazila Asikin Mohd Azmi ; Shuhaila Ahmad ; Rohana Jaafar
International Journal of Public Health Research 2013;3(1):241-248
The aim of the Fourth Millennium Developmental Goal is to reduce mortality among children less than 5 years by two thirds between 1990 and 2015. Efforts are more focus on improving children’s health. The aim of this study was to describe the trend of stillbirth and neonatal deaths in University Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre from 2004 to 2010. A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted using hospital data on perinatal mortality and monthly census delivery statistics. There were 45,277 deliveries with 526 stillbirths and neonatal deaths. More than half of the stillborn cases were classified as normally formed macerated stillbirth and prematurity was common in neonatal deaths. The trend of SB and NND was found fluctuating in this study. However, by using proportionate test comparing rate, there was a transient significant decline of stillbirth but not neonatal deaths rates between 2004 and 2006. On the other hand, the neonatal deaths rate showed significant increment from 2006 to 2008. When both mortality rates were compared using proportionate test, from the start of the study, year 2004 with end of the study, year 2010, there was no significant decline noted. Trends of stillbirth and neonatal death rates in University Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre within 7 years study period did not show the expected outcome as in Millennium Developmental Goal of two thirds reduction.
Stillbirth
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Infant Mortality
2.Weight Perception among Non-pregnant Urban Malaysian Women: Is It Reliable?
Fariza Fadzil ; Khadijah Shamsuddin ; Sharifa Ezat Wan Puteh ; Shuhaila Ahmad ; Noor Shaheeran Abdul Hayi ; Azah Abdul Samad ; Ruhaini Ismail ; Nor Izzah Ahmad Shauki
International Journal of Public Health Research 2015;5(2):637-642
In maternal healthcare, pre-pregnancy weight is used to predict pregnancy outcomes. Since no recorded data on pre-pregnancy weight, perceived weight is used alternatively. This study examines the relationship between perceived and actual weight among non-pregnant urban Malaysian women of childbearing age and identifies differences in perceived and actual weight by selected socio-demographic characteristics. A cross-sectional study was conducted between April and June 2013 among urban Malaysian women attending public health clinics in the Klang Valley. Information on height, perceived current weight and time when their weight was last taken were obtained and actual weight was the average of two measurements (TANITA-HD-323-digital-scale). Socio-demographic data collected were age, ethnicity, education level, marital and employment status and total household income. Mean age of 371 women in this study was 28.81±5.65, 82.2% were Malays, 62.8% had tertiary education, over 75% were married and employed, with more than half from middle-income households. Overall, the mean perceived and actual weight was 59.29±11.59 and 59.20±11.90 respectively. Pearson’s Correlation test showed a very strong positive correlation between perceived and actual weight (r=0.957;p<0.0001), ranging between 0.852 to 0.994 among subgroups; 258 (69.5%) perceived their weight accurately (±2.0 kg of actual weight), 49 (13.2%) under and 64 (17.3%) overestimated their weight. Main outliers were among younger women, Malays, tertiary educated, employed, middle-income and had weight last measured a month or more ago. Strong correlation between perceived and actual weight among women in this study reassured weight perception can be used more confidently in patients’ history taking and future research among urban Malaysian women using public health services.