1.Contribution of collaborators of the population and family planning program to strengthen quality of reproductive health services in the local level
Journal of Practical Medicine 2000;392(12):84-86
Evaluating the role of the health staffs and collaborators of the population and family planning program in the local level in the approach to women. Capacity of expansion of services and efficacy of these activities was carried out in urban commune of Tr¶ng Dµi, §ång Nai province and rural commune of Phôc LÔ, H¶i Phßng city. The results have shown that the collaborators of the population and family planning have successfully approached to women who were married, at reproductive ages. The collaborators self realized that it should strengthen their task and quality of services and knowledge, skill and practice
Reproductive Health Services
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Population
2.The Health Of Malaysia’s “Orang Asli” Peoples: A Review Of The Scientific Evidence On Nutritional Outcome, Parasite Infestations, And Discussion On Implications For Clinical Practice
Malaysian Journal of Public Health Medicine 2015;15(1):83-90
The Orang Asli of Malaysia continue to experience poor health. There appears to be stagnation of certain aspect of their health status. Underweight (low weight-for-age) and stunting (low height-for-age) are significant amongst Orang Asli children. Worm infestation such as Ascaris, Trichuris and hookworm continue to afflict Orang Asli communities in Malaysia. Orang Asli communities can also be afflicted by other kinds of parasites, e.g. malaria parasites, microsporida parasites and Cryptosporidium parasites. Thus, primary care doctors who treat Orang Asli patients should be on the lookout for malnutrition and its effects (including anaemia, iodine deficiency, Vitamin A deficiency) as well as worm and parasite infestations. Such patients may need to undergo de-worming at regular intervals because of the tendency to get re-infected. Primary care doctors also need to be aware of possible interactions between infestations and nutritional deficiencies.
Population Groups
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Health
3.Universal health care: What are the reform areas relevant to PAFP?
Noel L. Espallardo ; Policarpio Joves
The Filipino Family Physician 2019;57(2):107-111
A good health system is supposed to improve the health of the population by providing effective health services equitably. Thus, the Universal Health Care (UHC) Act was designed to adopt a health care system that provides all Filipinos access to quality and cost-effective promotive, preventive, curative, rehabilitative and palliative health services without causing financial hardship especially the poor sector. There are four major elements in the UHC where family physicians can play a major role. The first is the population to be covered where there is now a shift of coverage from membership by premium payments to citizenship. The next is the health interventions to be included. This benefit package should be the one affordable to the whole society with priority to the worst-off sector. The next is the network of health professionals who will provide the health services. The network must be adequately distributed to provide service coverage for the whole population including the geographically isolated and disadvantaged areas. The last is the financing, where the delivery of health services must provide financial protection for the poor. To translate this into a realizable health sector reform agenda at the national and local level, there is a need for context-specific technical analyses and consultations from various sectors especially the private sector.
Universal Health Care
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Population
4.Population aging and challenges of health care for elderly
Journal of Medical and Pharmaceutical Information 1998;(1):1-54
Population aging is a natural trend. People more than 60 years were elderly. The growth rate of elderly is the same as this of population growth rate. The average life expectancy of women will be 78.6 and men will be 72.6 within 30 next years. The rate of elderly indicated the social progress and economic development but it is burden for the health sector. The market mechanism and the industrialization process influenced significantly on the human health
Population
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Delivery of Health Care
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aged
5.Illness patterns and health care service seeking behaviour of elderly men and women in a rural distric, Vietnam
Journal of Medical and Pharmaceutical Information 2003;0(4):20-22
A survey on illness patterns and health seeking behaviour of 670 older persons had been conducted in Ba Vi district, Ha Tay province, results showed that: elderly women reported more acute illness than elderly men did; there were significant differences in term of acute and chronic illness patterns between elderly men and women; both men and women most commonly sought health care from private practitioners, then by self-treatment and from commune health centres, however, women used hospitals less often than men; for the elderly, the most common reason for choosing a health care provider was the nearness; women more significantly than men depended on others to decide the choice of the type of health care service they should use
Health Services
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aged
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Rural Population
6.Rapid Rural Appraisal of a Rural Village in Sabah
International Journal of Public Health Research 2013;3(1):223-231
Rapid Rural Appraisal (RRA) is a systematic, semi-structured activity carried out in the field by a multidisciplinary team that is designed to obtain new information and hypotheses about rural life. This article reports the results of an RRA conducted in Kampung Paris 1 (KGP1), Kinabatangan, Sabah under the Annual Health Promotion Program of the School of Medicine, Universiti Malaysia Sabah. A systematic random sampling was used to recruit the villagers and data was obtained through compilation of pre-existing data, field observation, structured interviews with key informants and villagers. Cardiorespiratory diseases were prevalent in KGP1. Common water sources such as rain water collected in dug wells in KGP1 were unhygienic. Dangerous toxic fumes were produced by the burning of municipal wastes nearby village houses. The villagers of KGP1 were exposed to various farm animals, which may harbor zoonoses. Health care services are limited in KGP1. Villagers who were not poor (>RM897) represented 48% of the population, followed by the poor (RM503-897), 20% and the hardcore poor (1.00 person per bedroom. Poor water hygiene, polluted air from open burning, exposure to farm animals, poverty, poor education, overcrowding and inadequate health care services were among the few possible factors affecting the health of villagers in KGP1. Formal rigorous research should be conducted in the future to facilitate specific health interventions in areas of need such as KGP1.
Rural Population
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Rural Health
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Rural Health Services
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Health Status
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Malaysia
7.Construction and use of big data for health management.
J H LIU ; P ZHANG ; C Z XU ; Y XU
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2019;40(2):227-230
Population-based lifetime health services rely on health management practice. Collection, management and analysis of big data are highly suitable for the huge population base in China. Nowadays, more and more research focus on the methods, security and ethnicity of health management and big data, and a plenty of instructive results have been made, which could be used to guide the future practice and development. Yichang mode has set a precedent for construction and use of big data for health management.
Big Data
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China
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Delivery of Health Care
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Health Services Research
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Population Health Management
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Population Surveillance/methods*
9.Decrease in trend of some water-born diseases in urban areas of Hai Phong
Journal of Preventive Medicine 2004;14(2):59-64
Results of retrospective survey of some water-born diseases in people at 3 urban districts, Hai Phong city showed that: the prevalence of low infected diseases were typhoid, hepatitis, malaria, haemorrhagic fever, eye disease; diarrhea, intestinal amebiasis, helminth were high infection but tended to decrease from 1997 to 2002. The prevalence of haemorrhagic fever and malaria on 100,000 people in Hai Phong city decreased by the year, reduction 7-49 folds compared to the whole country and there were only sporadic cases. The prevalence of the highest diseases was in the age of 60 (7.5%)
Water
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Disease
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Urban Health
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Urban Population
10.Investigation into prioritized health care services for children under five in some rural communes
Journal of Medical Research 2004;27(1):121-126
Study was conducted at 28 communes sampled from 7 geographical areas. 1457 mothers with children under five were interviewed by using questionnaire. At the same time facility surveys were carried out applying coverage cure method using by the MOH and UNICEF in order to evaluate quality and quantity of EPI and Growth chart monitoring at CHCs. The results: Out-come indicators of health care serviced for children under five indicated shortages in IEC activities provided the mother's knowledge on child health care. Low education level was one of the barrier preventing IEC, especially in mountainous areas. Health workers working at CHCs did not pay enough attention to IEC and to quality of care
Delivery of Health Care
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child
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Rural Population