1.Renal trauma: a local experience.
The Medical journal of Malaysia 1985;40(4):312-6
2.The experience of health sector reform in Tonga.
Papua and New Guinea medical journal 2006;49(3-4):104-7
experience
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Tonga
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Health
3.Health financing: the Fijian experience.
Papua and New Guinea medical journal 2006;49(3-4):99-103
experience
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Fijians
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Funding
;
Health
5.The experience of health reform in Vanuatu.
Papua and New Guinea medical journal 2006;49(3-4):108-11
experience
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Vanuatu
;
Health
8.Arteriovenous malformation of the mandible: A rare but life-threatening disease.
Baharudin Abdullah ; Abdullah Pohchi * ; Abdul Rani Samsudin
Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences 2007;14(1):62-64
AVM in the mandible is rare. It may present with recurrent episodes of unexplained gingival haemorrhage, bony swelling, tooth mobility or facial asymmetry. We reported our experience in managing a case of a 15 year old Malay girl who presented with a life threatening bleeding from her mandible.
Mandible
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Hemorrhage
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Arteriovenous Malformations
;
experience
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Tooth Mobility
9.Hand grenade blast injuries: An experience in Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia.
Tuan Hairulnizam Tuan Kamauzaman ; Rashidi Ahmad ; Kursi Abdul Latif ; Mohd Saharuddin Shah Che Hamzah ; Cheah Phee Kheng
Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences 2007;14(2):58-61
Hand grenade explosion is a rare occasion in our local community. Most of us have seen or heard about the injuries only from the TV news or newspaper. We report two cases of bomb blast injury that occurred in an army camp in September 2000. These case studies illustrate the clinical presentations of hand grenade blast injures that present with multiple organ involvement. We would like to share our experience in managing such cases in a busy emergency department and highlight the outcome of those two cases. Certain issues pertaining to the complexity of the injuries and mass casualty management are also highlighted.
Physical trauma
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Hand
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experience
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Malaysia
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Hospitals
10.Implementation of an event reporting system in a transfusion medicine unit: a local experience.
Mary F Usin ; Prathiba Ramesh ; C G Lopez
The Malaysian journal of pathology 2004;26(1):43-8
Event reporting can provide data to study the failure points of an organization's work process. As part of the ongoing efforts to improve transfusion safety, a Medical Event Reporting System Transfusion Medicine, (MERS - TM) as designed by Kaplan et al was implemented in the Transfusion Medicine Unit of the University Malaya Medical Centre to provide a standardized means of organized data collection and analysis of transfusion errors, adverse events and near misses. An event reporting form was designed to detect, identify, classify and study the frequency and pattern of events occurring in the unit. Events detected were classified according to Eihdhoven Classification model (ECM) adopted for MERS - TM. Since our system reported all events, we called it Event Reporting System - Transfusion Medicine (ERS-TM). Data was collected and analyzed from the reporting forms for a period of five months from January 15th to June 15th 2002. The initial half of the period was a process of evaluation during which 118 events were reported, coded, analyzed and corrective measures adopted to prevent the recurrence of the same event. The latter half saw the reporting of 122 events following the adoption of corrective measures. There was a reduction in the occurrence of some events and an increase in others, which were mainly beyond the organization's control. A longer period of evaluation is necessary to identify the underlying contributory causes that can be useful to develop plans for corrective and preventive action and thereby reduce the rate of recurrence of errors through proper training and adoption of just culture.
Reporting
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Transfusion, NOS
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Medicine
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experience
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seconds