1.Lifestyle Advice and Management
The Singapore Family Physician 2012;38(3):10-11
Smoking cessation is a most cost-effective medical intervention and helping our patients stop smoking is a highly worthwhile endeavor. A doctor providing smoking cessation counseling will do well to first realise why many smokers are unwilling (or unable) to quit. This article focuses on why a doctor should emphasise smoking cessation in the prevention and management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
2.The Overlap Syndrome of Asthma and COPD
The Singapore Family Physician 2013;39(2):19-20
The asthma-COPD overlap syndrome presents itself in patients where the asthma is not controlled despite seemingly appropriate measures or a patient who is a smoker and treated as COPD but also has asthmatic features. The asthma-COPD overlap syndrome is more common in the elderly. Such patients are of importance to diagnose because they have a high disease burden compared to asthma alone or COPD alone. Patients with both asthma and COPD should be identified earlier, as these patients have an increased risk for frequent exacerbations and therefore their treatment and follow-up should be optimised before hospital discharge. Also rehabilitation immediately after an exacerbation has been shown to be safe and effective to prevent further exacerbations requiring hospitalisation.
3.Pulmonary Rehabilitation
The Singapore Family Physician 2013;39(2):21-24
Pulmonary rehabilitation identifies and treats the systemic effects of the disease and the positive outcomes are realised without demonstrable improvements in lung function. It is multidisciplinary, patient centred and provides a comprehensive assessment upon which the three components of exercise training, self-management education, and psychosocial/ behaviour intervention are conducted over a period lasting 6 to 12 weeks. Pulmonary rehabilitation administered after hospital admission for an exacerbation was shown to be able to improve quality of life, improve exercise capacity, and also reduce re-exacerbation and hospital admission. Self-management education may promote long-term adherence to the exercise program.
4.SMOKING CESSATION – A PRACTICAL PARADIGM FOR DOCTORS
The Singapore Family Physician 2019;45(5):17-21
Helping people to stop smoking is a highly cost-effective and an important means of preventing cardiovascular disease such as ischemic heart disease and stroke. A doctor who fails to provide smoking cessation counselling to a patient who smokes is no better than a doctor who neglects to prescribe a cholesterol – lowering drug. Many smokers want to stop smoking, and others may be receptive to encouragement to stop. As doctors, we are in a unique position to help our patients stop smoking because our advice on health matters is trusted more than anyone else’s (or so we should hope to think). This article was first published in the Singapore Family Physician in 2008, and focuses on what a doctor should do with a patient who smokes. An additional update on alternatives to cigarettes has been added.
6.Smoking Cessation - A Practical Paradigm for Doctors
The Singapore Family Physician 2021;47(4):17-21
Helping people to stop smoking is a highly cost-effective and an important means of preventing cardiovascular disease such as ischemic heart disease and stroke. A doctor who fails to provide smoking cessation counselling to a patient who smokes is no better than a doctor who neglects to prescribe a cholesterol – lowering drug. Many smokers want to stop
smoking, and others may be receptive to encouragement to stop. As doctors, we are in a unique position to help our patients stop smoking because our advice on health matters
is trusted more than anyone else’s (or so we should hope to think). This article was first published in the Singapore Family Physician in 2008, and focuses on what a doctor should do with a patient who smokes. An additional update on alternatives to cigarettes has been added.
7.A prospective cohort study on the impact of a modified Basic Military Training (mBMT) programme based on pre-enlistment fitness stratification amongst Asian military enlistees.
Louis Y A CHAI ; Kian Chung ONG ; Adrian KEE ; Arul EARNEST ; Fabian C L LIM ; John C M WONG
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2009;38(10):862-868
INTRODUCTIONThis study objectively evaluates the effectiveness of a 6-week Preparatory Training Phase (PTP) programme prior to Basic Military Training (BMT) for less physically conditioned conscripts in the Singapore Armed Forces.
MATERIALS AND METHODSWe compared exercise test results of a group of less fi t recruits who underwent a 16-week modified-BMT (mBMT) programme (consisting of a 6-week PTP and 10-week BMT phase) with their 'fitter' counterparts enlisted in the traditional 10-week direct-intake BMT (dBMT) programme in this prospective cohort study consisting of 36 subjects. The main outcome measures included cardiopulmonary responses parameters (VO(2)max and V(O2AT)) with clinical exercise testing and distance run timings.
RESULTSAlthough starting off at a lower baseline in terms of physical fitness [VO(2)max 1.73 +/- 0.27 L/min (mBMT group) vs 1.97 +/- 0.43 L/min (dBMT), P = 0.032; V(O2AT) 1.02 +/- 0.19 vs 1.14 +/- 0.32 L/min respectively, P = 0.147], the mBMT group had greater improvement in cardiopulmonary indices and physical performance profiles than the dBMT cohort as determined by cardiopulmonary exercise testing [VO(2)max 2.34 +/- 0.24 (mBMT) vs 2.36 +/- 0.36 L/min (dBMT), P = 0.085; V(O2AT) 1.22 +/- 0.17 vs 1.21 +/- 0.24 L/min respectively, P = 0.303] and 2.4 kilometres timed-run [mBMT group 816.1 sec (pre-BMT) vs 611.1 sec (post-BMT), dBMT group 703.8 sec vs 577.7 sec, respectively; overall P value 0.613] at the end of the training period. Initial mean difference in fitness between mBMT and dBMT groups on enlistment was negated upon graduation from BMT.
CONCLUSIONPre-enlistment fitness stratification with training modification in a progressive albeit longer BMT programme for less-conditioned conscripts appears efficacious when measured by resultant physical fitness.
Adolescent ; Asian Continental Ancestry Group ; Body Mass Index ; Cohort Studies ; Exercise Test ; statistics & numerical data ; Humans ; Male ; Military Personnel ; statistics & numerical data ; Oxygen Consumption ; Physical Education and Training ; methods ; standards ; Physical Fitness ; Program Evaluation ; Prospective Studies ; Risk Assessment ; Running ; physiology ; Singapore ; Time Factors ; Young Adult