1.Awareness and attitudes of elderly Southeast Asian adults towards telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative study.
Ryan Eyn Kidd MAN ; Aricia Xin Yi HO ; Ester Pei Xuan LEE ; Eva Katie Diana FENWICK ; Amudha ARAVINDHAN ; Kam Chun HO ; Gavin Siew Wei TAN ; Daniel Shu Wei TING ; Tien Yin WONG ; Khung Keong YEO ; Su-Yen GOH ; Preeti GUPTA ; Ecosse Luc LAMOUREUX
Singapore medical journal 2025;66(5):256-264
INTRODUCTION:
We aimed to understand the awareness and attitudes of elderly Southeast Asians towards telehealth services during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in this study.
METHODS:
In this qualitative study, 78 individuals from Singapore (51.3% female, mean age 73.0 ± 7.6 years) were interviewed via telephone between 13 May 2020 and 9 June 2020 during Singapore's first COVID-19 'circuit breaker'. Participants were asked to describe their understanding of telehealth, their experience of and willingness to utilise these services, and the barriers and facilitators underlying their decision. Transcripts were analysed using thematic analysis, guided by the United Theory of Acceptance Use of Technology framework.
RESULTS:
Of the 78 participants, 24 (30.8%) were able to describe the range of telehealth services available and 15 (19.2%) had previously utilised these services. Conversely, 14 (17.9%) participants thought that telehealth comprised solely home medication delivery and 50 (51.3%) participants did not know about telehealth. Despite the advantages offered by telehealth services, participants preferred in-person consultations due to a perceived lack of human interaction and accuracy of diagnoses, poor digital literacy and a lack of access to telehealth-capable devices.
CONCLUSION
Our results showed poor overall awareness of the range of telehealth services available among elderly Asian individuals, with many harbouring erroneous views regarding their use. These data suggest that public health education campaigns are needed to improve awareness of and correct negative perceptions towards telehealth services in elderly Asians.
Humans
;
COVID-19/epidemiology*
;
Female
;
Telemedicine
;
Aged
;
Male
;
Singapore/epidemiology*
;
Qualitative Research
;
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
;
SARS-CoV-2
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
Middle Aged
;
Pandemics
;
Awareness
;
Asian People
;
Southeast Asian People
3.Diagnostic patterns and predictors of cognitive outcomes in autistic children in Singapore.
Chui Mae WONG ; Hwan Cui KOH ; Pratibha AGARWAL ; Lourdes Mary DANIEL
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2025;54(7):396-409
INTRODUCTION:
This study aimed to examine patterns of diagnosis, cognitive and adaptive functioning, and school placement outcomes in autistic children in Singapore, and to assess earlier predictive factors of cognitive outcomes.
METHOD:
Retrospective data were extracted from medical records of a specialist developmental paediatrics service for children born in 2008-2011 and referred to the autism clinic or were given a diagnosis of autism. Data items included demographic data, diagnostic methods, psychological assessment results, early intervention attendance and school placement outcomes.
RESULTS:
A total of 2124 children (82.6% male; 66.4% Chinese, 13.4% Malay, 9.8% Indian and 10.5% Others) were diagnosed with autism from the 4 birth-year cohorts. The mean (SD) age of the first clinical diagnosis of autism was 3.56 (1.14) years, with 81.0% of children receiving a concordant initial clinical diagnosis. A total of 1811 (85.2%) had a formal diagnostic assessment using the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS) at a mean (SD) age of 4.16 (1.11) years. Of 1326 with cognitive and adaptive assessment results, 16.6% had mild and 19.8% had moderate-severe cognitive impairment. Of 1483 with school placement outcomes, 45.9% went to mainstream schools, 21.8% entered SPED schools offering the national curriculum and 32.3% required customised curriculum SPED schools. Logistic regression showed that factors predicting intellectual impairment included higher ADOS scores (aOR 95% CI 1.13 [1.08-1.19] for Comm+SI total and 1.53 [1.33-1.75] for SBRI total), higher social communication level of support (based on the DSM-5 criteria) (aOR [95% CI] 2.14 [1.10-4.16] for level 2 and 14.94 [5.77-38.64] for level 3), and minority race (aOR [95% CI] 2.82 [1.52-5.20] for Malay, 5.19 [2.36-11.44] for Indian, and 4.54 [1.91-10.79] for Others).
CONCLUSION
These findings could guide policymakers and practitioners worldwide to strategically allocate diagnostic, intervention and educational resources, maximising developmental outcomes for autistic children across diverse settings.
Humans
;
Singapore/epidemiology*
;
Male
;
Female
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Child, Preschool
;
Autistic Disorder/complications*
;
Child
;
Early Intervention, Educational
;
Cognitive Dysfunction/diagnosis*
;
Cognition
4.Leveraging foundation and large language models in medical artificial intelligence
Nam Io WONG ; Olivia MONTEIRO ; T. Daniel BAPTISTA-HON ; Kai WANG ; Wenyang LU ; Zhuo SUN ; Sheng NIE ; Yun YIN
Chinese Medical Journal 2024;137(21):2529-2539
Recent advancements in the field of medical artificial intelligence (AI) have led to the widespread adoption of foundational and large language models. This review paper explores their applications within medical AI, introducing a novel classification framework that categorizes them as disease-specific, general-domain, and multi-modal models. The paper also addresses key challenges such as data acquisition and augmentation, including issues related to data volume, annotation, multi-modal fusion, and privacy concerns. Additionally, it discusses the evaluation, validation, limitations, and regulation of medical AI models, emphasizing their transformative potential in healthcare. The importance of continuous improvement, data security, standardized evaluations, and collaborative approaches is highlighted to ensure the responsible and effective integration of AI into clinical applications.
5.Incidence of Venous Thromboembolism after Primary Total Hip Arthroplasty with Mechanical Prophylaxis in Hong Kong Chinese
Daniel Wai-Yip WONG ; Qunn-Jid LEE ; Chi-Kin LO ; Kenneth Wing-Kin LAW ; Dawn Hei WONG
Hip & Pelvis 2024;36(2):108-119
Purpose:
The incidence of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) following total hip arthroplasty (THA) without chemoprophylaxis could be as high as 50% in Caucasians. However, according to several subsequent studies, the incidence of venous thromboembolic events (VTE) in Asians was much lower. The routine use of chemoprophylaxis, which could potentially cause increased bleeding, infection, and wound complications, has been questioned in low-incidence populations. The objective of this study is to determine the incidence of VTE after primary THA without chemoprophylaxis in an Asian population using a fast-track rehabilitation protocol and to verify the safety profile for use of ‘mechanical prophylaxis alone’ in patients with standard risk of VTE.
Materials and Methods:
This is a retrospective cohort study of 542 Hong Kong Chinese patients who underwent primary THA without chemoprophylaxis. All patients received intermittent pneumatic compression and graduated compression stockings as mechanical prophylaxis. Multimodal pain management was applied in order to facilitate early mobilisation. Routine duplex ultrasonography was performed between the fourth and seventh postoperative day for detection of proximal DVT.
Results:
All patients were Chinese (mean age, 63.0±11.9 years). Six patients developed proximal DVT (incidence rate, 1.1%). None of the patients had symptomatic or fatal pulmonary embolism.
Conclusion
The incidence of VTE after primary THA without chemical prophylaxis can be low in Asian populations when following a fast-track rehabilitation protocol. Mechanical prophylaxis alone can be regarded as a reasonably safe practice in terms of a balanced benefit-to-risk ratio for Asian patients with standard risk of VTE.
6.The Use of Phentermine for Obesity in Psychiatric Patients With Antipsychotics
Eunju KIM ; Daniel RIM ; Jeong-Hun SHIN ; Denise WONG ; Dong Wook KIM
Psychiatry Investigation 2023;20(9):799-807
Objective:
Phentermine is a commonly used weight-loss agent in the United States, but there is a little information about the use of phentermine for patients with obesity taking antipsychotic medications.
Methods:
We gathered 57 patients with obesity taking antipsychotic medications whose phentermine treatment was simultaneous with or after any type of antipsychotic exposure and collected data of clinical information, initial/follow-up anthropometric variables, and adverse events (AEs) for the 6-month study period.
Results:
In total, the mean body weight reduction (BWR) was 4.45 (7.04) kg, and the mean BWR percent (BWR%) was 3.92% (6.96%) at 6 months. Based on the response to phentermine, the patients were classified into two groups: the responder (n=25; BWR% ≥5%) and nonresponder (n=32; BWR% <5%) groups. The responder group’s mean BWR and BWR% were 10.13 (4.43) kg and 9.35% (4.09%), respectively, at 6 months. The responders had higher rates of anticonvulsant combination therapy (ACT; responder, 72.0% vs. non-responder, 43.8%; p=0.033) and a shorter total antipsychotic exposure duration (responder, 23.9 [16.9] months vs. non-responder, 37.2 [27.6] months; p= 0.039). After adjusting age, sex, and initial body weight, ACT maintained a significant association with phentermine response (odds ratio=3.840; 95% confidence interval: 1.082–13.630; p=0.037). In the final cohort, there was no report of adverse or new-onset psychotic symptoms, and the common AEs were sleep disturbances, dry mouth, and dizziness.
Conclusion
Overall, phentermine was effective and tolerable for patients with obesity taking antipsychotic medications, and ACT (predominantly topiramate) augmented the weight-loss effect of phentermine.
7.Diagnosis, treatment and prevention of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection in children: experts′ consensus statement (Fourth Edition)
Rongmeng JIANG ; Zhengde XIE ; Yi JIANG ; Xiaoxia LU ; Runming JIN ; Yuejie ZHENG ; Yunxiao SHANG ; Baoping XU ; Zhisheng LIU ; Gen LU ; Jikui DENG ; Guanghua LIU ; Xiaochuan WANG ; Jianshe WANG ; Luzhao FENG ; Wei LIU ; Yi ZHENG ; Sainan SHU ; Min LU ; Wanjun LUO ; Miao LIU ; Yuxia CUI ; Leping YE ; Adong SHEN ; Gang LIU ; Liwei GAO ; Lijuan XIONG ; Yan BAI ; Likai LIN ; Zhuang WEI ; Fengxia XUE ; Tianyou WANG ; Dongchi ZHAO ; Zhengyan ZHAO ; Jianbo SHAO ; Kwok-keung Daniel NG ; Wing-kin Gary WONG ; Xingwang LI ; Yonghong YANG ; Kunling SHEN
Chinese Journal of Applied Clinical Pediatrics 2022;37(14):1053-1065
Since December 2019, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2(SARS-CoV-2) infections have raged globally for more than 2 years.China has always adopted scientific and effective prevention and control measures to achieved some success.However, with the continuous variation of SARS-CoV-2 cases and imported cases from abroad, the prevention and control work has become more difficult and complex.With the variation of the mutant strain, the number of cases in children changed, and some new special symptoms and complications were found, which proposed a new topic for the prevention and treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infection in children in China.Based on the third edition, the present consensus according to the characteristics of the new strain, expounded the etiology, pathology, pathogenesis, and according to the clinical characteristics and experience of children′s cases, and puts forward recommendations on the diagnostic criteria, laboratory examination, treatment, prevention and control of children′s cases for providing reference for further guidance of effective prevention and treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infection in children in China.
9.Universal Screening For Gestational Diabetes Mellitus In Antenatal Mothers Improves Antenatal Management And Outcomes – Single Centre Experience
Nicholas Lee Wen Sheng ; Daniel Wong Bang Lung ; Safurah Jaafar ; Sangeetha ; Tiffany Grace Wong ; Salmiah Md Sharif
Malaysian Journal of Public Health Medicine 2021;21(1):230-238
This study examined the impact of universal screening in diagnosing and managing gestational diabetes (GDM) amongst antenatal mother and associated neonatal outcomes. It is a single-centre, retrospective study on routinely collected data of antenatal women in Health Clinic Seremban over one year in 2018. All women diagnosed with GDM, who were not known sufferers of type 1 or type 2 diabetes were included in this study. Participants were stratified according to risk factors for GDM to compare the performance of a selective high-risk screening approach to that of universal screening for detecting GDM. Subjects were categorized as high-risk for GDM based on the guidelines recommended by the Malaysian Clinical Practice guidelines. It was found that through universal screening, 246 antenatal mothers were tested positive for GDM out of the 987 of these mothers without prior diabetes, giving a prevalence of 24.9%. If selective screening using traditional risk factors had been employed, 54 (22%) of the antenatal mothers diagnosed with GDM would have been missed. It was established that risk factors for GDM included advancing age, other ethnicities (patients that are not of Malay, Chinese nor Indian ethnicities), obesity, history of abortion or GDM and family history of diabetes mellitus. Neonatal outcomes of those with GDM as compared to those without were similar. This study highlights that universal screening improved GDM detection rates amongst antenatal mothers. The increased detection helped facilitate an earlier intervention which may have contributed to better antenatal management and outcomes for neonates and their mothers.


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