Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Well, I have been saying this all the while. The government is set to meet the doctor:population ratio target of 1: 600 by 2015 and 1:400 by 2020. The news that appeared in the Star today http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/4/30/nation/11201514&sec=nation  is a clear indication of what is coming soon. However, I feel that we will achieve the ratio very much earlier. With the highest number of medical schools per capita population in the world, we will likely achieve the target of 1:400 by 2017/2018. Our Minister’s calculation of 3500 graduates annually is grossly miscalculated. By 2015, we will be producing at least 5000 graduates locally and another 1000-2000 from overseas. I don’t think our Minister knows what he is talking about, as usual. I also don’t believe that there is a 60% vacancies in civil service for doctors. In a true Malaysia Boleh spirit, our Minister has proudly said that we will “do better than WHO’s recommendation“. WTH, of course he never says anything about quality! Chasing quantities is not going to take us far.

I have attached another article below which caught my eye 2 days ago http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/4/28/nation/11196903&sec=nation. I have highlighted 2 sentences which is what I expect to happen to medical graduates by 2017. When all the posts in MOH are filled, I am sure local public university graduates and government sponsored students will be given priority. The self sponsored, whether from overseas or local private universities will most likely have wait in a “Q” or just have to find another job !

Doctor target within reach

By CHRISTINA TAN newsdesk@thestar.com.my

KLUANG: Malaysia is optimistic of having a doctor-population ratio of 1:400 by the year 2020, beating the World Health Organisation’s standard of 1:600.

Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said the Government was confident of meeting the standard despite currently facing a shortage of doctors with a ratio of only 1:800.

He said the ministry was however on track to achieve WHO’s standard of a doctor-population ratio of 1:600 by 2015.

We are optimistic that we can do better than WHO’s recommendation,” he told reporters after visiting the new Kluang Hospital in conjunction with the MCA roadshow here yesterday.

Liow said the present shortage of doctors was quite high with 60% vacancies that needed to be filled nationwide.

Several measures, he added, had been drawn up to increase the number of doctors and medical graduates, with the country producing about 3,500 every year.

“With the continuing efforts and measures to increase the number of medical personnel, the country can achieve its target,” he said.

At the event, Liow said the ministry would also provide Kluang Hospital with CT scan facilities worth RM5mil and 25 doctors, including specialists.

He also said the hospital needed an additional 150 nurses and other staff, adding that he would talk to the Public Service Department soon on resolving the matter.

4800 New Teachers

PETALING JAYA: The Education Ministry is taking steps to ensure Bachelor of Education graduates from public universities (IPTAs) will be absorbed in schools from May.

Over 4,800 new graduate teachers from IPTAs will receive their posting next month.

“A total of 4,671 graduate teachers will be sent to schools on May 23 while another 150 graduate teachers will be posted in July,” Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin said in a statement.

He revealed that the Education Services Commission had interviewed 4,953 candidates from IPTAs.

Only graduate teachers from IPTAs will receive their postings while graduates from private institutions of higher education (IPTS) will not be called for an interview by the commission yet.

Muhyiddin, who is also Education Minister, explained that graduate teachers from IPTAs were given preference over those from IPTS because their intake and the subjects they majored in were planned by the ministry.

Graduate teachers from IPTAs had earlier experessed concern over a delay in their      posting.

In Ranau, Sabah, Muhyiddin, who was on a two-day visit to the state, said the education system needed a revamp to produce a new breed of experts and skilled workers.

He said the current system had been adequate but the time had come to elevate it further to ensure the country achieved its goals.

“We must place importance on education to meet the manpower needs of the country,” he said when opening SMK Ranau and handing over of land to Institut Aminuddin Baki.

Malaysia, he said, would need another 3.3 million new workers in the next eight years in addition to the existing 12 million.

Meanwhile, at a dialogue in Kota Kinabalu later with the DPM, teachers said they were not given any special allowance for teaching the Kadazandusun language.

Muhyiddin urged teachers who were about to retire to properly plan for their golden years.

Also at the event were Chief Minister Datuk Musa Aman and Ex-Education Officers Association of Malaysia Sabah branch chairman Datuk Khamis Noyo.

Last friday, my orthopaedic surgeon had a marathon of surgeries. A well-known condominium in JB town had a lift malfunction and the lift gave way 2 storeys high. It fell with 10 occupants. About 5 patients landed in my hospital after initial management at GH.

A segmental fracture of RT Femur in a 63 year old lady!

A Tibial plateau fracture with knee joint  involvement in a 52-year-old lady!

Any lift phobias ????

This news appeared in the Star 2 days ago: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/4/17/nation/11116137&sec=nation. A MOU was signed to allow some private and public university lecturers to run specialist services in district hospitals. Few people asked for my opinion on this issue and whether it is a prelude for something else that is coming. I would say that there are pros and cons to this arrangement. One of the main reason why many do not want to join the private or public universities is because majority would not be able to do clinical practise. Even though all these medical schools are attached to a MOH hospital, the politics that goes inside these hospital prevents the academics from running any service for the hospital. I had written about this in March 2007 in Berita MMA https://pagalavan.com/my-mma-articles/march-2007academicians-vs-service-providers-clash-of-the-titans/. Allowing these specialist to run services in district hospitals will allow them to keep the clinical skills intact and at the same time teach the students.

However, we must understand that majority of the academics in most of our private and some public medical schools are expats. That is the reality. In fact, there is even a joke that some universities can be known as Burmese universities as almost all their lecturers are Burmese. I have seen good ones and bad ones. Some of these academics have not done clinical work for many years. Thus, they may be good in theoretical knowledge but not clinical acumen. Secondly, how many of this district hospitals have enough facilities to run specialist service? For example, do Tapah hospital have ultrasound facilities, CT scans, operating theatres etc? The OT is mainly for minor cases and not for major cases. Most of these hospitals do not even have enough A class medications. Even LSCS cannot be done in their OT.  Most of the hospitals mentioned below are in this category. So, having a specialist in this hospital may not add any benefit. It may be useful for Internal medicine services but not surgical services. I am also not sure whether MOH is paying for these services, as previously they don’t.

The government prevented medical schools from building their own teaching hospitals since the late 1990s, after HUKM. Unfortunately, this rule was removed when our PM launched Perdana University!! Now, every medical school is racing ahead to set up their own teaching hospital. UCSI is setting up in PD, IMU is buying over Pantai Ampang, Melaka Manipal is setting up Manipal Hospital and I heard even Allianz Medical college is building a private hospital too!! So, here comes another madness after 36 medical schools. It is a way for the private uni to make more money. Frankly speaking, private hospital are not suitable to be made a teaching hospital at this moment. How many private hospitals have all the specialities and manage complicated and chronic cases? WE do not have a National healthcare scheme yet to subsidise patients in private hospitals. Almost 80-90% of the patients in private hospitals now are insurance paid. The cost is just too high for any cash paying patients. Most of these patients wants privacy and personalised care by a consultant. Any new private hospitals will take 5-7 years to be fully occupied by patients. It does not mean that when these hospitals open, patients will be rushing in like a shopping complex! There will not be enough pool of patients for training purposes.

Private hospitals do not hire medical officers or housemen. The only medical officers they hire is for the emergency department. Consultants are NOT employed or paid a salary by these hospitals. Will this scenario change? There are still few questions that are unanswered .  Are these hospitals only meant for their lecturers ? Will the specialist be paid a fixed salary by the university unlike the normal private hospitals? Will this private hospitals start to hire MOs and HOs? Economically, it is not viable. That’s the reason why Monash decided to put their plan on hold. Private hospitals will take at least 5-7 years to start to make profit for the investment made. Thus, it is very unlikely they can employ MOs and HOs as financially they will not be able to cope. Furthermore, under the Medical Act, housemanship can only be done in public hospitals. And, will the consultants/lecturers have enough time to teach the students when they are busy with their patients in the ward/clinic?

I was informed that some private hospitals which belongs to big corporate giants are proposing to use their hospitals for postgraduate training. Well, it may be useful for certain subspeciality training in big private hospitals but not for basic speciality training. Again, there will be a lot of issues to settle. Will MOH pay the trainees to be trained in these hospitals? How much will MOH pay to these hospitals to run this “training” scheme? How much will the consultants be paid by MOH or will MOH pay the hospitals only? Will the consultant really train these trainees or merely use them as their free coolie?

Whatever it is , I smell something fishy in all this. For sure, there will be a lot of money involved and changing hands, from right pocket to left pocket! The standard of healthcare will definitely go down the drain due to poor training etc. I wonder whether there will come a time where the rakyat will lose faith in our doctors and go elsewhere for medical treatment? Our politicians are already doing it! Will we become like the Indonesians who rush to Malaysia and Singapore to seek treatment??? Only time will tell……………….

Varsity lecturers to help out at 22 hospitals

By ROSHIDI ABU SAMAH  roshidi@thestar.com.my

TAPAH: The Health Ministry has identified 22 public and private universities which will provide specialist medical services in 22 district hospitals nationwide.

Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said the universities were among 33 public and private universities in the country that offer medical courses.

He described it as a smart partnership as the hospitals would provide all the necessary facilities while the universities would send their lecturers who are also medical experts with various specialisations.

He said the collaboration would result in more patients receiving specialist treatment with a shorter waiting period.

“It is a win-win solution for the ministry, universities and the public,” he said after witnessing the signing of the smart partnership between the ministry and nine universities at the Tapah Hospital yesterday.

The ministry was represented by its secretary-general Datuk Kamarul Zaman Md Isa while the nine universities were represented by their vice-chancellors or top officials.

The nine universities that inked the partnership agreement were Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman that would provide specialist medical service at the Tapah Hospital, Management and Science University (Kuala Kubu Baru Hospital), Perdana University (Bentong Hospital), Universiti Malaysia Sarawak (Serian Hospital), UCSI University (Dungun Hospital), Lincoln University College (Lahad Datu Hospital), Allianze University College of Medical Sciences (Kepala Batas Hospital), Melaka Manipal Medical College (Jasin Hospital) and Mahsa University College (Tanjung Karang Hospital).

Liow said the signing ceremony with the remaining 13 universities would be held later.

“The partnership will help ease congestion at main hospitals and increase the bed occupancy rate at district hospitals,” he said, adding that priority areas include internal medicine, general surgery, paediatrics, obstetrics and gynaecology, orthopedic and anaesthesiology.

For so many years, ever since my housemanship days, the issue of overworked doctors have been appearing on and off in the newspapers. Today’s Star headline is about the same issue all over again http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/4/14/nation/11106586&sec=nation, http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/4/14/nation/11106584&sec=nation. Nothing happens after that,as the usual Malaysian style. All talk but no action! BTW why only HOs are overworked? what happen to the overworked MOs and specialist!!

When the shift system was implemented I wrote this https://pagalavan.com/2011/05/15/for-future-doctors-shift-work-for-housemen/. The whole idea of the shift system is to reduce the number of housemen in each shift so that they will have a better exposure to patients and more rest time. If not, 50 housemen will be running around in the ward every morning !! However, it will definately increase the workload of the housemen during each shift as they will end up seeing more patients at any one time, especially in busy and big hospitals. The entire shift system was not properly implemented and thought of. Our DG, with just a single circular forced all the hospitals to implement the shift duties in September 2011 without proper discussion. Before the implementation, only 2 “small” hospitals were used to run a pilot project. The same principle cannot be applied throughout the country as different hospitals have different problems, different number of ward etc etc. That was my concern then. It is now proven to be correct.

SCHOMOS had a discussion with MOH and came up with the flexi system with total number of hours capped at 60 hours/week. Thus, every hospital was given the authority to implement the shift system based on the best model for the respective hospitals. I was informed that the shift system only made the situation worst in some big and major hospitals in the country. Whatever it is, the rest time was adequate in total.

I have said this before and I will say this again that being a doctor in stressfull. If you can’t handle the stress then leave! If you are incompetent to be a save doctor, then you must be sacked as patient safety should always be the priority. From my experience, most housemen who can’t cope are people who did not realise a life as a doctor and forced by parents. Parents were only concerned about glamour, money and nothing else. So, when they see their child working like a “dog” they get upset and start complaining. I feel the generation Y youngsters are over pempered and unable to handle stress. Probably there is something seriously not right about our education system or the parents!

Everyone is talking about housemen nowadays just because there are too many of them and many are from well to do families and VIPs. If not how can you afford RM 500K to do medicine locally in all our dubious medical schools. Quality is dropping very fast and the consultants are having tough time handling this situation. That could be the reason why the MOs and specialist are beginning to shout at the housemen nowadays, thus labelled as “bullies”. I pity all those medical officers and specialist who are also overworked but never appeared in the newspaper!! This is because, these people have gone throu worst scenarios and able to handle all these situation. Wonder how I can work 24 hrs a day, 7 days a week? good training when I was a housemen.

BTW, the dead of the housemen has nothing to do with being overworked from what I gather and he never worked 5 consecutive days. The director of Kajang hospital said that he has 180 housemen, which means each department should have atleast 30 housemen!!

Housemen still being overworked and bullied, sending some into depression

Stories by LOH FOON FONG, LIM WEY WEN, P. ARUNA and SHAUN HO

Under the Graduate Medical Officer Flexi Timetable system, introduced last September, housemen can only work up to 60 hours a week with two days off. But implementation has been reportedly poor at some hospitals.

Health director-general Datuk Seri Dr Hasan Abdul Rahman said the ministry would seek explanations from hospitals found overworking their housemen, adding that the ministry was willing to help them implement the system effectively if they were facing a shortage of housemen.

However, he said he had checked timetables in Kuala Lumpur Hospital, Ampang Hospital, Serdang Hospital, Klang Hospital, Selayang Hospital and Sungai Buloh Hospital but had not seen any houseman made to work for more than five days a week or to do double shifts.

Earlier, Malaysian Medical Association president Dr Mary Cardosa urged the ministry to review the shift system and conduct a study on the mental health of junior doctors.

On the death of Dr Lee Chang Tat, 29, who was found dead in a restroom of the paediatrics ward at Kajang Hospital with a used syringe beside him, she said there was no data to show the number of housemen who suffered from depression due to their long working hours and stress.

“There should be some kind of mechanism to assist troubled doctors, whether they have personal or work-related problems or can’t handle the stress.”

The Malaysian Medical Council, meanwhile, reviews an average of five cases of doctors with mental health issues each month. It is learnt that there were 20 cases last October.

“Most of them are housemen, but we have also heard cases on medical officers,” said former Health director-general Tan Sri Dr Ismail Merican.

“The types of issues range from psychiatric problems to anxiety and coping problems,” Dr Ismail said.

Dr Ismail, who is also former MMC chairman, said the working hours for housemen may not be as demanding as before the shift system was implemented, but they were exposed to other sources of stress in their work including demands from patients, their superiors and other colleagues,” he added.

System that’s a burden to many housemen

PETALING JAYA: A 27-year-old houseman lamented that although the shift system was good, it was poorly implemented at his hospital.

He claimed that it was up to each department to implement the system.

The houseman alleged that when he first joined the hospital, he had to work 92 hours a week and on 24-hour shifts for up to one and a half months.

But things improved after someone brought up the issue to the management.

However, for departments that lacked housemen, they had to work long hours and without on-call allowance.

This was because allowances were not provided for in the shift system and housemen were not expected to work more than 72 hours a week, he added.

The houseman said they were paid a fixed RM600 a month but without the RM100 to RM200 allowance for each on-call duty.

He also claimed that eight housemen suffered depression and were under psychiatric observation as they could not take the bullying from senior doctors, whom he said constantly shouted and belittled them.

They were also burdened with a training duration that was extended from four to six or seven months for each department.

“One houseman went into depression after he failed his assessment twice,” he said, adding that some housemen got themselves transferred to another hospital or just resigned.

Another houseman Dr G.M. Pillai, 28, said Ipoh Hospital was trying its best to adhere to the rules set by the Health Ministry.

“We work 60 to 65 hours a week and sometimes up to 70 hours. But if we have to work up to 70 hours, we are given less hours the following week,” he said.

Before the shift system was introduced, he had worked up to 36 hours.

But, after it was implemented, the hours were capped at a maximum of 20 and they get a whole day off the next day, he said.

What is happening here? After this report http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/4/12/nation/11090364&sec=nation appeared in the newspaper today, I received few emails and even friends asking me about this incident. I have always said that doctor’s life is stressful but before jumping into any conclusion, just review the article below critically. Did the police say that it is a suicide?

I was made to understand that bullying is rampant in this hospital. Something that I do not tolerate but our civil service is rotting anyway. Most of the HODs nowadays are good for nothing. Sorry to say this but it is the reality on the ground. How many of them do teaching rounds, grand rounds, supervise housemen and Master’s students? I am sure most of you will know that the universities do pay a fee to the HODs for every Master’s student that is posted to his department. It use to be RM 1000-2000/month! Do you also know that every medical school attached to the hospital have to pay RM 600-1000/month to the HODs? All these money suppose to be used to facilitate the teaching of Master’s student and medical students. BUT I am sure you know what happens on the ground.

Now, coming back to the story below. The police said that it is an overdose and never said that it is a suicide! I have seen doctors who were pethidine addicts before who stole pethidines from OT. Furthermore, he was found in the hospital’s toilet and not at home or in his room. If at all he wants to commit suicide, I am sure he will do it at home or in his room. If it is true that he worked 5 days in a row then the HOD should be taken to task!! No one can work 5 days in a row. Even in those days when I was a housemen, the longest I have worked is 56 hours ( 2 consecutive calls) but it was a passive call. Generally, we work 32-36 hours the longest. Could the system have made him to become an addict to stay awake and energize himself?

I am also surprised to see that this doctor graduated from Uruguay? There is no university from Uruguay recognised in Malaysia. So, if it is true then he must have sat and pass the MQE exams, thus explaining his age of 29.

I am not sure what exactly happened to this guy. We need more info before we can conclude that it is due to work stress. Whatever it is, I hope MOH will conduct a detailed investigation into this matter. I also hope that the housemen in this hospital will contact the state SCHOMOS rep or MOH if indeed it is true that bullying is rampant in this hospital to the extent that extension etc has become a norm!

Trainee doctor found dead after suspected overdose

By M. KUMAR kumar@thestar.com.my

KUALA LUMPUR: A trainee doctor was found dead in a restroom at Kajang Hospital.

Police believe he had overdosed on an unidentified drug.

Lee Chang Tat, 29, was found dead in the men’s room of the paediatric ward at 7am yesterday by hospital staff who went looking for him after they noticed that he was missing.

He was found with a used syringe beside him, which police believe he had used to inject himself with a drug to fight off fatigue.

It is learnt that Lee, who had been working at the hospital for the past three years, had been working on call for five consecutive days.

Selangor health director Datuk Dr Azman Abu Bakar said hospital staff, who found Lee, tried to resuscitate him but were unsuccessful.

“He was rushed to the emergency room but it was too late,” he said.

Lee, he stressed, had no previous medical problems.

A security guard at the hospital said they found him when someone tried calling Lee on his handphone and heard the ringing tone coming from the restroom.

“We broke into the toilet cubicle and found him lying there with the needle,” he said.

Kajang OCPD Asst Comm Abdul Rashid Abdul Wahab said Lee, who studied medicine in Uruguay, had been complaining to his family about the hectic working hours.

“His family said he had also been planning to go on a holiday to Cambodia soon with friends,” he said.

ACP Abdul Rashid confirmed that an initial post-mortem indicated that Lee had died of an overdose, adding that the case was being investigated as sudden death.

Last year in October 2011, the government reduced pharmacist compulsory service from 4 years to 2 years https://pagalavan.com/2011/10/06/i-told-you-so/. It was reported that almost 90% of the post in government sector has been filled. Subsequently, MOH has also allowed pharmacist to do their internship training in private sector. I was also informed that the 2 years compulsory service for pharmacist are now given on contract basis. The only good thing for pharmacist will be that their opportunity in private sector is still open especially when the government introduces the 1Care system which will need a lot of community pharmacies.

Today, MOH has announced that compulsory service for dentist will be reduced from 3 years to 2 years! This sentence really surprised me as well “For those who have served their compulsory two years, they may wish to join the private sector,” she said before launching the Colgate Oral Health Month 2012 in Bandar Utama yesterday.She said that last year, 415 graduates had registered with the Malay­sian Dental Council. This represents an almost 400% increase from 2002 to 2011 (112 in 2002 to 415 in 2011),” she said.

Even though the increase is almost 400% in 10 years, the total number is still small (415 last year). Compare this with medicine, where the total number was 7000 last year, from just about 2000-3000 in 2008!! An increase of 4000- 5000 in just 4 years with 50% of the 36 local medical schools yet to produce any graduates!

I know for sure that MMC is being pressurised to reduce the compulsory service to just 2 years of housemanship. Once this is implemented, you need to apply for a job after housemanship ( which will be given on contract basis) in government service or wherever else! There are also some plans by private hospitals to offer themselves for post-graduate training!! God save us all!

So, when will be the doctors turn? 2013? 2014?……………….keep guessing but for sure it is coming.

Shorter stint in govt hospital for dental grads

By WONG PEK MEI pekmei@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: Dental graduates will only have to serve the Health Ministry for two years instead of three, Deputy Health Minister Datuk Rosnah Abdul Rashid Shirlin said.

She said the Malaysian Dental Council had approved the shorter national service on Feb 29.

“Due to the tremendous increase in the number of graduates, it is timely that the compulsory national service be shortened. This will ensure that new graduates will continue to serve in the ministry.

“For those who have served their compulsory two years, they may wish to join the private sector,” she said before launching the Colgate Oral Health Month 2012 in Bandar Utama yesterday.

She said that last year, 415 graduates had registered with the Malay­sian Dental Council.

“This represents an almost 400% increase from 2002 to 2011 (112 in 2002 to 415 in 2011),” she said.

Rosnah said with the setting up of new facilities and upgrading of existing facilities at the primary care level, the ministry would continue to require the services of dental graduates.

She said there were 4,289 active dental practitioners, with 58% of them serving in the public sector as at Dec 31.

Malaysian Dental Assocation president Dr Mohamad Muzafar Hami­rudin said he was shocked to find that 90% of adults had cavities, according to a survey by the ministry.

He said that since oral diseases might be linked with a higher incidence of life-threatening diseases, it was important to educate Malaysians about regular dental check-ups.

The news below appeared in Berita Harian today http://www.bharian.com.my/bharian/articles/Kapastertinggaldalamhidung/Article/ . If you all remember, just a few weeks ago I did bring up an issue of poor regulation to monitor the so-called foreign trained “specialist”. The government has now allowed doctors (Malaysians) who have been in service for 10 years and more overseas to return to the country without the need for compulsory service. Previously they still need to do the 3 years compulsory service and during this time, they are put under supervision and then properly gazetted as a specialist by MOH.

Unfortunately now, anyone can come back and claim that they are a specialist and can practise in private hospitals and clinics. MMC only gives them the license to practise as a doctor but NOT as a specialist. That was the reason the National Specialist Register(NSR) was created in 2006 to register all specialists in the country BUT again, it is not compulsory. It will become compulsory only after the Medical Act 1971 is amended. The amendment of the medical act suppose to have happened in 2009 but till today it has not reached the Parliament!

So now, it is up to the respective hospitals to credential them as a specialist!! definitely this is biased. All private hospitals are profit driven and what they look at is the money. Whatever screw-ups the doctors do is up to the doctor to handle. The hospital has made the money anyway! So, some of these hospitals have started to recruit so-called foreign trained “specialist” from certain particular country to practise freely in their hospital without any supervision and without proper credentialing. The case below is an example of what is happening. Even before this, I have already heard some horror stories. If your vision is good, you can see the hospital’s name!

The situation will only become worst when the government liberalise the health sector and invite foreign doctors to set up hospitals and clinics in Malaysia!!

God save the rakyat!

Kapas tertinggal dalam hidung

Oleh Mohd Fahmi Mohd Yusof bhjb@bharian.com.my 2012/04/04

 SITI KHADIJA menunjukkan laporan polis dan botol yang mengandungi  kapas yang tertinggal dalam hidungnya ketika ditemui semalam.

SITI KHADIJA menunjukkan laporan polis dan botol yang mengandungi kapas yang tertinggal dalam hidungnya ketika ditemui semalam.

Pelajar dakwa sakit pada bahagian pernafasan, tekak selepas dibedah
JOHOR BAHRU: Seorang pelajar institusi pengajian tinggi awam (IPTA) terkejut apabila mendapati segumpal kapas sepanjang tujuh sentimeter (cm) tertinggal dalam hidungnya, selepas seminggu menjalani pembedahan hidung bagi merawat masalah sinus di sebuah hospital swasta di sini. Siti Khadija Aziz, 24, berkata, beliau menjalani rawatan pada 14 Mac lalu selepas mengalami selsema dan sakit tekak sebelum doktor hospital berkenaan mengesahkannya mengalami sinus dan perlu menjalani pembedahan segera.

“Susulan cadangan itu, saya menjalani pembedahan hidung keesokannya. Sepanjang tempoh selepas pembedahan, saya mula merasakan kesakitan pada bahagian pernafasan hidung hingga ke tekak selain kerap berlendir dan berdarah.
“Selain itu, saya juga mengalami kesukaran bernafas apatah lagi selepas pembedahan, doktor berkenaan tidak membenarkan proses pernafasan melalui hidung dilakukan. Saya juga sukar bercakap selain kedua belah telinga selalu gatal.
“Jika bercakap, suara saya menjadi sengau sehingga ramai bertanya apa yang berlaku hingga saya malu untuk berkomunikasi dengan rakan dan ahli keluarga yang lain,” katanya ketika ditemui, semalam. Katanya, susulan kejadian itu pada 20 Mac lalu, beliau kembali mendapatkan rawatan susulan di hospital berkenaan dan memberitahu segala masalah yang dihadapinya tetapi doktor terbabit mendakwa keadaan itu adalah normal dan hanya memerlukan rawatan biasa.
“Selepas pulang daripada hospital, saya masih rasa sakit seperti sebelum ini selain kesukaran bernafas dan kerap keluar darah dan lendir dari hidung.
“Keadaan itu berlarutan hingga pada 23 Mac, saya tidak tahan lagi dengan kesakitan itu lalu menghembus nafas agak kuat melalui hidung dan apa yang mengejutkan, segumpal kapas bercampur darah dan lendir keluar melalui hidung.
“Selepas bahan asing itu terkeluar, pernafasan saya kembali normal dan boleh bercakap tanpa mengeluarkan suara sengau seperti sebelumnya.

Pada 25 Mac, saya bertemu dengan dengan doktor terbabit dan menunjukkan kapas berkenaan,” katanya.
Bagaimanapun, katanya, doktor terbabit tidak menjelaskan penemuan gumpalan kapas itu, sebaliknya meneruskan rawatan seperti biasa dan cuba mengalih perhatian ketika persoalan mengenai kapas itu diajukan.
Sehubungan itu, katanya, beliau membuat laporan di Balai Polis Johor Bahru pada 28 Mac lalu selepas mengeluarkan perbelanjaan pembedahan dan rawatan kira-kira RM13,150.

When I read what our DPM said in the newspaper today, I almost fell off my chair. I think our politicians are becoming clowns to entertain us all the time. Just look at another article that was published in the Star yesterday “EIS sets parents abuzzhttp://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/3/31/nation/11024129&sec=nation which I have attached below. Two contradicting reports!! I wonder why our politicians send their kids overseas then?

Before anyone get excited, please read this report http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/guan-eng-calls-muhyiddins-education-claim-preposterous/ The last few paragraphs in this article clarifies how the survey was conducted and misinterpreted.

When I see what is happening around me at times, I wonder whether our National schools are only for the poor and underprivileged students. More and more rich and well to do parents are sending their children to private schools, international schools and Singapore. The elite Malays have taken over the MARA colleges which suppose to be for the poor. Interestingly, MARA is implementing Cambridge curriculum for the students in their 45 colleges nationwide http://blog.limkitsiang.com/2011/08/10/why-can-mara-teach-maths-and-science-in-english/  & http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/8/6/nation/20110806160512&sec=nation where as national schools are not supposed to teach Maths and Science in English!! What a double standard? Do you know that UiTM also teaches everything in English!!

Frankly speaking our education system is in the mess. We have national schools, vernacular schools, MARA colleges, agama schools, boarding schools, matriculation, STPM and all sort of pre-U courses without any standardisation. Some are even reserved for certain race only! Then we have universities which are reserved for certain races, run by political parties etc etc. Our university rankings are dropping yearly and our graduates are of poor quality . Teachers who can’t speak English but teaching english. Our SPM results are becoming the best every year as we have the “best” students in the world who scores most number of As. Almost all students in urban areas are attending tuitions on daily basis which is nothing to be proud of. That simply shows the trust that the parents have on the education thought in the schools nowadays.

Well, I can go on ranting but who cares? At the end, as long as the politicians can keep the rakyat stupid, they will be at the top all the time.

BTW, all registered and prepared to vote?

Muhyiddin: Our education system is one of the best

 KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian youngsters are receiving better education than children in the United States, Britain and Germany.

Quoting the World Economic Forum’s global competitiveness report, Education Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassinsaid Malaysia was ranked 14th among 142 countries and second in Asean for quality education.“For those who have come to me complaining about our education system, it seems the report contradicts their claims,” he said when closing a national higher education carnival at the Putra World Trade Centre here yesterday.Muhyiddin, who is Deputy Prime Minister, reiterated the Government’s commitment to give quality and affordable education to every citizen.

“Only with quality education can we increase the nation’s intellectual and human capital capabilities towards becoming a high-income nation by 2020,” he said.

“As we head there, wages will go up and labour intensive industries will become less competitive as investors look elsewhere for cheaper labour,” added Muhyiddin.

“Our nation’s success will be determined by our ability to produce intelligent, highly skilled workers for these industries.

“In this context, investment in the education sector is critical,” he said.

At another function, Muhyiddin called for closer rapport between the public and the police to combat crime.

“Once a close relationship is fostered, the community will not hesitate to work together with the police to relay information on crime as well as participate in crime prevention activities,” he said when opening the 19th annual general meeting of the Malaysian Crime Prevention Foundation (MCPF).

EIS sets parents abuzz

By MOHD FARHAAN SHAH farhaan@thestar.com.my

JOHOR BARU: Excited parents here cannot wait for the opening of an international school right in the city here.

Bank officer Muzaffar Musa, 35, said that he had planned to enrol his children at a Singapore school next year.

However, he would send them to the Excelsior International School in Seri Alam.

Muzaffar said he always wanted to send his children to a Singapore school, saying that the island state has a better education system.

“But now I’m inclined to send my daughters to Excelsior School as it is located nearer to my place.

“This means I no longer need to travel so early to the school in Singapore,” he said yesterday.

Businesswoman Dalilah Bakar, 49, welcomed the international school, adding that parents now have a good opportunity to get the best education for their children.

“Many parents send their children to schools in Singapore instead of international or privately-run schools here.

“Some of these type of schools here only care about making profit without taking the students’ needs into account,” she added.

Sales executive K. Kumaraguru, 38, whose son is studying in Singapore for the last two years, said he might transfer him to Excelsior School as it is nearer to his house.

“I feel bad for my son who has to wake up at 4am and comes home after 8pm,” he added.

Excelsior School, due to open in September next year, will include elements of the Singaporean school curriculum and cater to the growing expatriate community in the state capital.

It is jointly developed by Raffles Campus Pte Ltd (RCPL) education group and Seri Alam Properties Sdn Bhd.

Spread over eight hectares, the school offers classes from kindergarten to high school for children aged three to 18.

It would be equipped with laboratories, an Olympic-sized swimming pool, football field, running tracks, drama and dance studios and an auditorium

Case 1:

2 weeks ago, a 60+ year old man came to see me. He came with 4 days history of inability to open his mouth completely, unable to protrude his tongue, stiff neck muscles and upper back. He denied taking any medication such as Maxolon. He has a chronic venous ulcer of the RT ankle area over the last 1 year.

I examined him and found a locked jaw, inability to protrude his tongue with stiff muscle of the neck. His venous ulcer was dirty and full of slough. As a benefit of doubt, I gave him stat dose of IM Kemadrine but after waiting for more than an hour, no response was seen which excluded oculogyric crisis. A diagnosis of TETANUS was made. Since I did not have Tetanus Immunoglobulin in my hospital and the patient unable to afford admission, I referred him to the general hospital. I wrote the word “TETANUS” huge enough in the referral letter that any “monkey” can see it . I thought everything would have been taken care.

Today, I heard the horror story of what happened to this patient. He was seen by a doctor at the GH who did not even bother to read and take note of my letter, not sure whether he/she even examine the patient, did a TMJ Xray and referred for an appointment to see a dental surgeon!!! The patient then decided to go to another nearby private hospital despite his financial constraints, to get admitted and be rightfully treated as Tetanus.

Case 2:

A 3 months year old baby was brought to a district hospital for recurrent jerky movement of the limbs and up rolling of eyeball to left. He was seen by a doctor and discharged claiming that FBC was normal as thus nothing to worry about!! The baby was brought to our hospital the next day with almost persistent on and off jerky movements and my pediatrician said that it was a clear-cut seizure. A diagnosis of meningitis was made but unfortunately, it is probably too late. The seizure was resistant to anti-seizure medications and had to be intubated and sent to general hospital for ventilation. Most likely the baby might have developed hypoxic encephalopathy and may develop CP in the future.

Case 3:

A 86-year-old man was admitted to a GH for fever, cough and lethargy. He was diagnosed to have Left basal Pneumonia and treated with antibiotics. He was discharged after 2 days and given appointment 2 months !! We all know that a simple pneumonia can cause death in an elderly man. He was brought to see me today with worsening condition.

Has our standard of healthcare gone this low? Is this going to go into a vicious cycle of mediocrity? The first case is a blatant disrespect to the physician who referred the case. I presume the decision was made by an MO who probably would not have seen a single case of Tetanus in his/her life! Probably, he/she do not even know what is tetanus!! If you don’t know, please ask a senior or call and ask a specialist. Worst come to worst, just admit the patient based on the diagnosis given by the private physician. I find this as a serious attitude problem which is affecting some of the current generation of doctors. No respect to other doctors or colleagues, especially if the referral comes from a private doctor. I have seen many cases like this but I am just giving an example.

I don’t know what to say about the second case! How can a recurrent jerky movement of a 3month year old baby can be normal!! This was exactly what Dr Wong YO was saying in his letter yesterday. Doctors nowadays depend on investigations then taking proper history and examining the patients. Just because FBC was normal, the patient was sent back home!! Do you know that FBC can be normal in sepsis? Whenever a medical student tells me that the WBC is normal and thus infection is excluded, I will tell him/her to fly kite!

The 3rd case just proves that there is lack of empathy to elderly patients. A pneumonia can kill an elderly patient. This is a well-known fact. It is one of the commonest cause of death in the elderly. How can you discharge the patient and give an appointment after 2 months!! Even if your bed is full and need to discharge this patient, you should have arranged an appointment to see him within the next 4-5 days or even earlier.

I have a feeling that the situation is only going to get worst with the glut of doctors that are emerging and lack of good trainers. What Dr Wong YO said will come true that doctors nowadays do not have the passion, empathy and genuine interest in treating patients. I feel for the patients.

This is a beautifully written letter by Dr Wong Yin Onn, a Consultant Physician and Associate Professor at Monash Malaysia which you can also read over here http://myhealth-matters.blogspot.com/2012/03/do-you-want-to-be-doctor-by-prof-wong.html and here https://www.facebook.com/groups/179465178830655/#!/groups/179465178830655/doc/198885280221978/. Dr Wong is a senior Consultant Physician who is running a private clinic in JB town. When the Monash campus started in JB in 2006, he was one of the first to offer his service to teach the students. He is an excellent teacher who was thought by the giant, Prof TJ Dhanaraj, the founder dean and Professor of Medicine of University of Malaya, my alma mater as well. University of Malaya medical faculty was one of the best medical school in the world back then! I am sure you know why it deteriorated!

His reply is to the same person who emailed me and said that I am dampening the spirits of many budding doctors. Well, I am just saying the truth and the future prospect and Dr Wong do agree with me in this letter. However, if you have genuine interest in medicine and willing to put up with all the frustration that will come along the way, then by all means go ahead but it will never be a smooth sail.

Do you want to be a Doctor?

Dear Daryl,
Your aunt has asked that I share with you my thoughts on medicine and medical education today.
Let me start by saying that I am most blessed to have trained under your Aunt, Prof Florence Wang, and I recall my time in ward 12A at University hospital under her as a most formative part of my training. Thank you prof!
It has been 3 decades since then and the world has changed. The world of Medicine and medical education has changed beyond even the most imaginative of us all had dared to dream. Some things are good and much detrimental.
I will have to ask you very honestly why you wish to pursue a career in Medicine for this is very important.
Most students simply have very little knowledge of the world of medicine and some very quickly become disillusioned in their clinical years. ALL my students come to me with FULL distinctions or stand at >97 percentile of their cohort; that they are brilliant is without a doubt but sadly many are NOT that motivated to serve humanity. They come into medical school because their results qualify them too, they sing the right well rehearsed song at the interview and because they think it is prestigious, they want to be a medical student!
But the real world of sick humans with all the smell and excrement and drains rapidly reverse all those good feelings, and harsh reality sets in. Osler a great Physician whom your aunt and I both greatly admire said that THE VERY FIRST QUALIFICATION is a Love for Humanity. I believe that that quality is far more important than all the ‘A’s in your result slip.
AS a GOOD doctor, You will be very important. We have plenty of doctors but not many GOOD ones. The future of many lives and families depend on what doctors do and SAY; imagine all the Good or Damage that can be done. But to be a good doctor is NOT easy. I just had a tutorial with my students and told them that the VOLUME of information that they need to read up is so MUCH that any serious student will honestly spent ALL his time doing very little but STUDY. I hope this realisation will help you understand the quality of life you will have as a medical student, or rather the lack of it.
Modern medical education has moved far beyond lecture based learning; here in the Clinical school the word ‘LECTURE’ is OBSCENE and students learn through SDL – Self directed learning. Its philosophy being that the advance of knowledge is so rapid that Students MUST learn to teach themselves rather than being taught formally in a Lecture Hall. This demands very matured and disciplined students for to the lazy student, SDL means Sleeping DeepLy. Are you prepared for years of being a nerd?
Please remember that Doctors are first and foremost Diagnosticians… those training under me MUST not only be skilful in diagnosis and management but also in social skills and leadership. When I was under your aunt, she demanded History taking so detailed and meticulous that ‘War and Peace’ looked like a short story in comparison. Today students speak in SMS like language, and do “Focussed History Taking” instead of Detail History taking. Yes the Art of Clinical diagnosis is dying, and HIgh Touch Medicine being replaced by High Tech Medicine.
In many Once Prestigious Universities which I will not name, Final Year students now teach 3rd year students Clinical Methods!!! Your aunt will tell you that 3 decades ago, only the senior consultants in UM were allowed to teach Clinical Methods as it was considered so very2 important. Osler is certainly turning in his urn!!
In your mind, do you envision yourself as a doctor spending hours talking, feeling, touching, examining the patients….  or a doctor ordering scans and more scans with nary a glance at the nameless poor sick man lying on the bed? Ask yourself that question now.
Yes, the practise of Medicine is in trouble.
Blatant commercialisation, rampant blood tests done without any doctors ordering or supervising, scans and probes of all kinds, are being conducted by laboratories and some doctors misguilded by wants rather than needs. When your aunt was holding the fort at Ward 12A, her ward rounds will start at 8am and the whole entourage of the Professor, Dr HC Ting the lecturer, the Medical Officer, the houseman and the medical students will follow her from bed to bed. The medical student or the houseman will present the LONG DETAIL history and she will then TALK TO EVERY PATIENT WITHOUT EXCEPTION about aspects of the history and personally examine every patient to confirm or correct the juniors’ findings. This of course was a long tedious process and the rounds will stretch till 1pm. But it was the Art of Clinical Diagnosis at its finest. Today, I am sad to report that rounds are spent looking at scans and reports and its a RARE occasion that the Consultant lays his hands on the sick. Sadly I am not exacerating. I wish I am.
Hope lies in every one of us doctors, present and you the future, for the sensible management of patients; YOU remain the hope for untold numbers of patients in the future. Sadly some doctors see patients not as patients but as a disease that needs treatment which provides our source of income. This is nothing new, physicians like Osler had repeatedly cautioned against not forgetting the man behind the disease, and medicine as a calling rather than a business.
“The practice of medicine is an art, not a trade; a calling, not a business; a calling in which your heart will be exercised equally with your head. Often the best part of your work will have nothing to do with potions and powders, but with the exercise of an influence of the strong upon the weak, of the righteous upon the wicked, of the wise upon the foolish”.~ Sir William Osler
Many doctors are unhappy with their work or simply too busy to talk, console or listen. Yes thats life in the 21st century where we sms instead of talk. Many just treat the disease and completely ignore the person who has it. We hear endless tales carried by patients of doctors who grunt instead of talk, who are capable only of monosylable conversation and who zip patients in and out of the consultation room with a speed that will make Superman jealous. I try my very best to teach my students the Art of Clinical Diagnosis but even I fear that its a losing uphill battle. My colleagues and I here are led by Prof Khalid who is a old school clinician, and we refuse to belittle the Clinical Art despite the advancing machinery all around us. Students are amazed and impressed by all the wizardry and sometimes to my frustration fail to practise the Clinical Skills as much as I want them to.
Ask yourself Daryl, what do you want? I do not want you to come to medical school and be disillusioned by what you see in the REAL MEDICAL WORLD as compared to the idealised world that we had projected.
Doctors must never forget why we became doctors in the first place, and the wonder of caring for fellow humans. Some may be a bit burnt out. We had in our careers, seen and taken care of more pain and misery than most people. We saw prostitudes, drug addicts, criminals and the worst of humanity. Yes, this is another point that I must raise to you. AIDS today is the TB of your aunt’s era, its everywhere! Most of my students come from very privileged families or they cannot afford the fees! Hence it is a shock to many when confronted with Vagabonds, homeless, addicts, pimps and Prostitutes. All the glamour flushes away when you realise that such folks are among the many that you will encounter daily unless you are in some Beverly Hills practise.
But of course we also treated decent human beings, doting grandmothers and innocent children. No doubt, the demands on our skills and the medical-legal complexities that accompany our practise would have made even the greatest of our medical ancestors shudder. And for this your training is NOT the 5 years of medical school BUT many2 years beyond. Are you prepared for such a LONG time spend in studies and training?
You had read Dr Pagal’s blog and written to him, while he may be harsh and discouraging, much of what he wrote to you with regards to THE SYSTEM has some truth to it. The system is basically dictated by our political masters, a system undeniably sick, and Dr Pagal has written frankly of much of our woes that only drastic administrative tsunamis can repair.
Yes the system only makes it more painful. Long waits for post graduate training positions is the norm now. Regulations as thick as a medical text. Pharmacies selling controlled medicines like sweets. To change that will require one of us to be the next Prof Virchow, plunging head on into politics to make a difference.
In school we rose above the hoard, we were the cream de la cream, and yes I can testify to that in my students. Some are so brilliant they frighten me. We obtained results the envy of most and we strove with pride to enter medical school. Could the same students have done well in other fields? Of course they will shine too!!
In medical school you will work like ants on a long march. You will stare at slides till you see mitochondria in your dreams and memorised volumes of facts and figures. Some of my students are NOT prepared for this; they thought that it will be a smooth passage and when they hear this old Professor here telling them to read XYZ, they simply turn off and zone away. Are you ready for a student life that has NO LIFE??
I take them for tough postings in Internal Medicine, I am among the strictest examiners, I expect the students to flourish in the drudgery of crowded wards, to work till hypoglycaemic on medicine rounds, to perform every procedure required in the book, and of course to pass their exams reasonably well. I expect them to look at X-rays until their eyes turned red. And do I have such students? Yes, I am blessed that many such students have walked the wards with me. And I am proud of them. And I know they will overcome every obstacle invented by our political masters to excel in their fields because they have the fundamental quality to be a good doctor; their love of Humanity and of the Art of Medicine.
You will finally graduate and become a house officer. Yes the field is as packed as sardines from Malaysia to UK to Australia, Dr Pagal is NOT exaggerating when he says that jobs will be difficult to come by soon. But if you are GOOD, you will be wanted!  It’s TOUGH I do not deny that, and TOUGHER as the years pass by, BUT again I emphasize, if you are good, you will be wanted, for the good doctor is a rare specimen.
A few years later, you will pick a specialty, from paediatrics to surgery, family medicine to cardiology, internal medicine to radiology, and shuffled off to more clinics, rounds grand or otherwise, work and studies. And MORE EXAMs. Girlfriend? Oh what Girlfriend!!!
About 20% of my own class are still SINGLE!
In the 80s, new diseases appeared. I still recall with trepidation managing the very first patient admitted to our hospital with AIDS. We knew very little but feared a lot. As registrar, it was my duty to examine him. But again we survived. And learned. Now at almost every bedside teaching, I see patients with HIV. In your generation, you will see many many more new ones, from Avian flu number something to any new thing that crosses species as humanity ravishes the environment. Ready for that?
Your youthful enthusiasm and dedication will push you through the initial years. As young doctors, weren’t we incredible then, if only because we came back to the wards night after night, day after day for emergencies, calls, rounds or simply a ’tissued’ drip. “Bengkak” the nurse will phone and we leave our dinner to struggle with chemo wrecked veins for IV access.
Did you know that your aunt will reprimand the ladies for coming to the wards in pants? It is NOT acceptable then but now almost all my female students come in pants! OOPs sorry Prof for leaking such old tales!
We as doctors try to hold onto our commitment to heal, that wonderful calling. Then we see another world – the realm of the business of medicine, where every disease is a “case” to be investigated.
A very senior Professor tells me she had seen doctors ordering investigations before even taking a history! Here is also the world of the grunting and monosylable doctor, the superman of 2 minute consultations and management. True, the superb rare genius of a diagnostitian may well have obtained all the data that he needed sub- 2 minutes, but the poor human called ‘the patient’ needed at least 6 minutes of compassionate conversation. (By the way, that is why the OSCE exam is 6 minutes long, or SHORT from your examinee viewpoint… now you know how the patient will feel when the consultation is even shorter than this!). Recall that the only reason the woman in labour remembered the attending medical student is because they held her hand while she screamed.
We are the descendents of Aesclepius, the inheritors of all that is noble in the Hippocratic oath. We may fail to change the ideas of many doctors however we may preach from some elusive high moral ground. But as individuals can YOU NOT lose that ideal? If you can, welcome to the world of medicine and modern medical education. You will thrive no matter what! If not, seriously reconsider another vocation.
If we tell our students that the learning of medicine is through their apprenticeship to us their seniors, then we better be sure that we are good role models. Your aunt was a superb clinician and diagnostician and had inspired many of us.
As a future doctor, you can be the hope of the febrile, the breathless and the pregnant.
Do not let what you see in the misadventures of some doctors discourage you. Instead let them be teachers to you for you now know what you do NOT want to be like.
When a doctor have taken medicine to be a business or trade, he will ask what are his achievements — material success, cars, wealth, etc..
When a doctor has taken medicine to be a calling, he will ask what has he become — his character.
I hope we doctors can discern and reflect on what we have become in the practice of medicine, and teach all our young charges, delivering them safely through the long 5 years of protracted labour into a reasonably sane medical world. Daryl, I hope I have helped you somehow. Your aunt, Prof Florence has taught me much, this is my little tribute in return, my Bunga Emas to her.
Thank you
Associate Professor Wong YO.