1.Kajian Rintis Penilaian Literasi Digital: Kesediaan Guru Prasekolah Menggunakan Platform Pembelajaran dalam Talian untuk Pendidikan Pemakanan (A Pilot Study Assessing Digital Literacy: Preschool Teachers’ Readiness to Use Online Learning Platforms in Nutrition Education)
CHONG YI TING ; POH BEE KOON ; RUZITA ABD. TALIB ; KOH DENISE ; WOO PIK XUAN ; NELSON GEORGIA LIVAN ; CHEAH WHYE LIAN ; LEE JULIA AI CHENG ; YATIMAN NOOR HAFIZAH ; ESSAU CECILIA A ; REEVES SUE ; SUMMERBELL CAROLYN ; GIBSON EDWARD LEIGH
Malaysian Journal of Health Sciences 2024;22(No.1):71-82
eToyBox is a learning management system for preschool teachers to improve their health literacy, which ultimately aims
to improve children’s obesity-related behaviour. As part of the development process of eToyBox, assessment on digital
literacy, acceptance of digitization of education materials, and perceived barriers in adopting online learning is needed.
Fifty-four preschool teachers under the Community Development Department (KEMAS) in Kuala Lumpur, Selangor,
and Sarawak, who participated in ToyBox Study Malaysia intervention in 2018, took part in this cross-sectional study.
An online self-administered questionnaire was used to assess sociodemographic background, use of communication
tools and media, and teacher’s views on adapting the ToyBox modules to digital education materials. Respondents were
contacted, and questionnaire link was shared through WhatsApp messages. Most participants (74.0%) were Malay
females aged 31 to 40 years old. Most participants had internet access (94.4%) and owned at least a smart phone,
laptop or tablet (94.4%). Participants perceived their computer skills to be average (75.0%). Majority of respondents
(65.0%) reported advanced and higher abilities in word processing and email, but only 22.0% in spreadsheet skills. The
main barrier to accessing online material was unstable internet connection (74.1%). Most respondents (90.0%) agree
that adapting effective modules to online learning will be beneficial for professional development and teaching practices.
In conclusion, most participants supported digitizing Toybox Study Malaysia educational content and were comfortable
72
with its implementation via an online learning platform. The findings from this study can advise future development of
online learning materials for preschool teachers in Malaysia.
2.Patterns of orthopaedic injury among hospitalised personal mobility device users and bicycle riders: a comparative study.
Don Thong SIANG KOH ; Yew Lok WOO ; Ting Hway WONG ; Mann Hong TAN
Singapore medical journal 2022;63(8):445-449
INTRODUCTION:
Personal mobility devices (PMDs), such as electronic scooters or motorised bicycles, are efficient modes of transportation. Their recent popularity has also resulted in an increase in PMD-related injuries. We aimed to characterise and compare the nature of injuries sustained by PMD users and bicycle riders.
METHODS:
This retrospective study compared injury patterns among PMD and bicycle users. 140 patients were admitted between November 2013 and September 2018. Parameters studied included patients' demographics (e.g. age, gender and body mass index), type of PMD, nature of injury, surgical intervention required, duration of hospitalisation and time off work.
RESULTS:
Of 140 patients, 46 (32.9%) patients required treatment at the department of orthopaedic surgery. 19 patients were PMD users while 27 were bicycle riders. 16 (84.2%) patients with PMD-related injuries were men. PMD users were significantly younger (mean age 45 ± 15 years) when compared to bicycle riders (mean age 56 ± 17 years; P <0.05). A quarter (n = 5, 26.3%) of PMD users sustained open fractures and over half (n = 10, 52.6%) required surgical intervention. Among 27 bicycle users, 7.4% (n = 2) of patients sustained open fractures and 70.4% (n = 19) required surgical intervention. Both groups had comparable inpatient stay duration and time off work.
CONCLUSION
PMD-related orthopaedic traumas are high-energy injuries, with higher rates of open fractures, when compared to bicycle injuries. In addition, PMD users are significantly younger and of economically viable age. Prolonged hospitalisation and time off work have socioeconomic implications. Caution should be exercised when using PMDs.
Male
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Humans
;
Adult
;
Middle Aged
;
Aged
;
Female
;
Bicycling/injuries*
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Fractures, Open
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Orthopedics
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Hospitalization
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Accidents, Traffic
3.Artificial Intelligence on Urology Lab
Jae Baek HA ; Jaewoon JEONG ; Jeongyoon SUH ; Sungyun PARK ; Ruei Ting WANG ; Taewoo KIM ; Ji Eun KOH ; Jong Hyun TAE ; In Ho CHANG ; Se Young CHOI
Korean Journal of Urological Oncology 2022;20(3):163-176
The development of lab-on-a-chip technology based on microfluidics has been used from diagnostic test to drug screening in biomedical science. Lab-on-a-chip technology is also being expanded to the concept of an organ-on-a-chip with the development of cell biology and biocompatible material development. In addition, artificial intelligence (AI) has brought dramatic changes over the past few years in science, industry, defense, science and healthcare. AI-generated output is beginning to prove comparable or even superior to that of human experts. Lab-on-a-chip technology in specific microfluidic devices can overcome the above bottlenecks as a platform for building and implementing AI in a large-scale, cost-effective, high-throughput, automated and multiplexed manner. This platform, high-throughput imaging, becomes an important tool because it can generate high-content information which are too complex to analyze with conventional computational tools. In addition to the capabilities of a data provider, lab-on-a-chip technology can also be leveraged to enable AI developed for the accurate identification, characterization, classification and prediction of objects in heterogeneous samples. AI will provide quantitative and qualitative analysis results close to human in the urology field with lab-on-a-chip.
5.Correlation of NUF2 Overexpression with Poorer Patient Survival in Multiple Cancers
Xiaodan JIANG ; Yan JIANG ; Senbiao LUO ; Karthik SEKAR ; Clara Kai Ting KOH ; Amudha DEIVASIGAMANI ; Qingzhe DONG ; Niankai ZHANG ; Shenling LI ; Fengyun HAO ; Brian Kim Poh GOH ; London Lucien OOI ; Yu WANG ; Kam Man HUI
Cancer Research and Treatment 2021;53(4):944-961
Purpose:
NUF2 has been implicated in multiple cancers recently, suggesting NUF2 may play a role in the common tumorigenesis process. In this study, we aim to perform comprehensive meta-analysis of NUF2 expression in the cancer types included in the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA).
Materials and Methods:
RNA-sequencing data in 31 cancer types in the TCGA data and 11 independent datasets were used to examine NUF2 expression. Silencing NUF2 using targeting shRNAs in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cell lines was used to evaluate NUF2’s role in HCC in vitro and in vivo.
Results:
NUF2 up-regulation is significantly observed in 23 out of the 31 cancer types in the TCGA datasets and validated in 13 major cancer types using 11 independent datasets. NUF2 overexpression was clinically important as high NUF2 was significantly associated with tumor stages in eight different cancers. High NUF2 was also associated with significantly poorer patient overall survival and disease-free survival in eight and six cancers, respectively. We proceeded to validate NUF2 overexpression and its negative association with overall survival at the protein level in an independent cohort of 40 HCC patients. Compared to the non-targeting controls, NUF2 knockdown cells showed significantly reduced ability to grow, migrate into a scratch wound and invade the 8 μm porous membrane in vitro. Moreover, NUF2 knockdown cells also formed significantly smaller tumors than control cells in mouse xenograft assays in vivo.
Conclusion
NUF2 up-regulation is a common feature of many cancers. The prognostic potential and functional impact of NUF2 up-regulation warrant further studies.
6.Ministry of Health Clinical Practice Guidelines: Lipids.
E Shyong TAI ; Boon Lock CHIA ; Amber Carla BASTIAN ; Terrance CHUA ; Sally Chih Wei HO ; Teck Siew KOH ; Lip Ping LOW ; Jeannie S TEY ; Kian Keong POH ; Chee Eng TAN ; Peter TING ; Tat Yean THAM ; Sue-Anne TOH ; Rob M van DAM
Singapore medical journal 2017;58(3):155-166
The Ministry of Health (MOH) has updated the Clinical Practice Guidelines on Lipids to provide doctors and patients in Singapore with evidence-based treatment for lipids. This article reproduces the introduction and executive summary (with recommendations from the guidelines) from the MOH Clinical Practice Guidelines on Lipids, for the information of SMJ readers. Chapters and page numbers mentioned in the reproduced extract refer to the full text of the guidelines, which are available from the Ministry of Health website: http://www.moh.gov.sg/content/moh_web/healthprofessionalsportal/doctors/guidelines/cpg_medical.html.
Adult
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Cardiovascular Diseases
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complications
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therapy
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Child
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Coronary Artery Disease
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complications
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therapy
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Decision Support Systems, Clinical
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Dyslipidemias
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blood
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complications
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therapy
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Evidence-Based Medicine
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Female
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Humans
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Kidney Failure, Chronic
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complications
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therapy
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Life Style
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Lipids
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blood
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Lipoproteins, LDL
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blood
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Male
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Practice Guidelines as Topic
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Pregnancy
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Pregnancy Complications
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Risk Assessment
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Risk Factors
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Singapore
8.Ministry of Health Clinical Practice Guidelines: Prevention, Diagnosis and Management of Tuberculosis.
Yee Tang Sonny WANG ; Cynthia Bin Eng CHEE ; Li Yang HSU ; Raghuram JAGADESAN ; Gregory Jon Leng KAW ; Po Marn KONG ; Yii Jen LEW ; Choon Seng LIM ; Ting Ting Jayne LIM ; Kuo Fan Mark LU ; Peng Lim OOI ; Li-Hwei SNG ; Koh Cheng THOON
Singapore medical journal 2016;57(3):118-quiz 125
The Ministry of Health (MOH) has developed the clinical practice guidelines on Prevention, Diagnosis and Management of Tuberculosis to provide doctors and patients in Singapore with evidence-based treatment for tuberculosis. This article reproduces the introduction and executive summary (with recommendations from the guidelines) from the MOH clinical practice guidelines on Prevention, Diagnosis and Management of Tuberculosis, for the information of SMJ readers. The chapters and page numbers mentioned in the reproduced extract refer to the full text of the guidelines, which are available from the Ministry of Health website: http://www.moh.gov.sg/content/moh_web/healthprofessionalsportal/doctors/guidelines/cpg_medical.html. The recommendations should be used with reference to the full text of the guidelines. Following this article are multiple choice questions based on the full text of the guidelines.
Disease Management
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Evidence-Based Medicine
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methods
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Government
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Humans
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Morbidity
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trends
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Practice Guidelines as Topic
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Singapore
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epidemiology
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Tuberculosis
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diagnosis
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epidemiology
;
prevention & control
9.Hyperfamiliarity in Dementia and Mild Cognitive Impairment.
Kathryna Sh KWOK ; Shahul HAMEED ; Sze Yan TAY ; Way Inn KOAY ; Sharon KOH ; Christopher GABRIEL ; Kinjal DOSHI ; Simon Ks TING
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2015;44(9):342-349
INTRODUCTIONHyperfamiliarity, a phenomenon in which feelings of familiarity are evoked by novel stimuli, is well described in epilepsy and the lesioned brain. Abnormality of familiarity in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) have also been described in the literature, but more from a neuropsychological approach perspective. Currently, there is a lack of study on the real-life experience of familiarity abnormality in dementia and MCI. Our aim was to compare the occurrence of hyperfamiliarity among dementia and MCI.
MATERIALS AND METHODSWe recruited 73 participants, 29 with AD, 10 with vascular dementia, 7 with MCI and 27 healthy controls, and administered a questionnaire to assess hyperfamiliarity frequency.
RESULTSHyperfamiliarity was observed in real-life in cognitive impairment, but was unrelated to its severity or underlying aetiology.
CONCLUSIONThis study highlights the similar rate of occurrence of hyperfamiliarity in the daily life of individuals with cognitive impairment. Future research should examine neuropsychological correlations and mechanisms that contribute to such observations.
Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Alzheimer Disease ; physiopathology ; psychology ; Case-Control Studies ; Cognitive Dysfunction ; physiopathology ; psychology ; Dementia ; physiopathology ; psychology ; Dementia, Vascular ; physiopathology ; psychology ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Recognition (Psychology) ; Severity of Illness Index ; Singapore
10.Hypertension management and lifestyle changes following screening for hypertension in an Asian low socioeconomic status community: a prospective study.
Liang En WEE ; Jolene WONG ; Run Ting CHIN ; Zhi Yong LIN ; Daniel E Q GOH ; Kalpana VIJAKUMAR ; Kiat Yee VONG ; Wei Ling TAY ; Hui Ting LIM ; Gerald C H KOH
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2013;42(9):451-465
INTRODUCTIONThis study investigated the effect of an access-enhanced intervention on hypertension screening and management, as well as on health behaviours among newly diagnosed hypertensives, in a multi-ethnic low socioeconomic status (SES) community. Factors associated with hypertension screening, treatment, and control in the community were also determined.
MATERIALS AND METHODSThe study involved all residents aged ≥40 years in 2 public rental housing precincts (low SES), between 2009 and 2011, who were followed-up prospectively for 1 year after a 6-month community-based intervention comprising a 3-month access-enhanced screening component and a 3-month follow-up (outreach) component. Blood pressure was measured at baseline and follow-up. Multivariate Cox regression determined predictors of hypertension management at follow-up.
RESULTSThe follow-up rate was 80.9% (467/577). At baseline, 60.4% (282/467) were hypertensive; 53.5% (151/282) were untreated; 54.2% (71/131) uncontrolled. One year later, postintervention, 51.6% (78/151) of untreated hypertensives were treated; combined with treated hypertensives previously uncontrolled, 53.0% (79/149) achieved control. Older age independently predicted treatment (adjusted relative risk, aRR = 1.98, CI, 1.08 to 3.65); majority ethnicity (aRR = 1.76, CI, 1.05 to 2.96), employment (aRR = 1.85, CI, 1.26 to 2.80) and newly treated hypertension (aRR=1.52, CI, 1.01 to 2.32) predicted control. A total of 52.4% (97/185) were irregularly screened at baseline; at follow-up 61.9% (60/97) were regularly screened. Cost and misperceptions were common barriers to screening and treatment. Newly diagnosed hypertensives were also less likely to go for additional cardiovascular screening (aRR = 0.54, CI, 0.29 to 0.99).
CONCLUSIONAn access-enhanced intervention had some success in improving hypertension management within low SES communities; however, it was less successful in improving cardiovascular risk management, especially in encouraging lifestyle changes and additional cardiovascular screening amongst newly diagnosed hypertensives.
Adult ; Age Factors ; Aged ; Antihypertensive Agents ; therapeutic use ; Asian Continental Ancestry Group ; statistics & numerical data ; Diet, Sodium-Restricted ; methods ; Exercise Therapy ; methods ; Female ; Health Services Accessibility ; statistics & numerical data ; Humans ; Hypertension ; diagnosis ; ethnology ; therapy ; Male ; Mass Screening ; Middle Aged ; Multivariate Analysis ; Patient Compliance ; ethnology ; statistics & numerical data ; Patient Dropouts ; statistics & numerical data ; Poverty ; statistics & numerical data ; Proportional Hazards Models ; Prospective Studies ; Risk Reduction Behavior ; Singapore ; Smoking Cessation ; methods ; Social Class ; Treatment Outcome ; Weight Reduction Programs ; methods


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