Showing posts with label public health measures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public health measures. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

Berita Harian: Semua klinik digabung... Oleh Syed Azwan Syed Ali

Semua klinik digabung
Oleh Syed Azwan Syed Ali

BERITA HARIAN, 2011/01/10

KERATAN  muka depan akhbar Berita Harian yang disiarkan 3 Januari lalu.
KERATAN muka depan akhbar Berita Harian yang disiarkan 3 Januari lalu.
 
Pusat kesihatan swasta, kerajaan bersatu di bawah 1Care tingkat akses rakyat

KUALA LUMPUR: Semua klinik kerajaan dan swasta akan digabungkan di bawah Skim Penjagaan Kesihatan Nasional 1Care bagi meningkatkan akses rakyat kepada perkhidmatan kesihatan yang lebih komprehensif, selaras dengan pelan induk penstrukturan semula sistem kesihatan negara yang dijangka siap sepenuhnya pada 2013.

Melalui skim yang mengguna pakai model Perkhidmatan Kesihatan Nasional (NHS) di United Kingdom itu, kira-kira 800 klinik kerajaan dan lebih 7,000 klinik swasta di seluruh negara akan berfungsi sebagai doktor keluarga rakyat dan membuat saringan untuk menentukan sama ada pesakit boleh dirujuk ke hospital untuk rawatan lanjut.

Apabila dilaksanakan kelak, setiap individu diwajibkan memilih atau melantik pengamal perubatan sama ada di klinik kerajaan atau swasta berkenaan sebagai doktor keluarga dan mendapatkan rawatan bagi sakit biasa sebelum boleh dirujuk ke hospital untuk rawatan lanjut.

Cadangan skim 1Care dan penstrukturan semula sistem kesihatan negara itu dilaksanakan berikutan kenaikan kos penjagaan kesihatan yang meningkat setiap tahun dan mencecah RM14 bilion tahun lalu.

Menteri Kesihatan, Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai ketika mengumumkan butiran skim itu semalam, berkata ia akan dilaksanakan secara berperingkat dalam enam fasa dengan penggabungan semua klinik kerajaan dan swasta dalam fasa ketiga, selepas fasa menaik taraf kepakaran dan kelengkapan di klinik serta hospital kerajaan dan fasa integrasi sistem ICT klinik kerajaan dan swasta disiapkan.

Katanya, cadangan pen-strukturan semula perkhidmatan penjagaan kesihatan dibentang kepada Majlis Ekonomi tahun lalu dan mendapat persetujuan Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Najib Razak yang mahu Kementerian Kesihatan menyiapkan pelan induk dalam tempoh dua tahun.

“Pembaharuan itu mengambil ambil masa yang panjang untuk dicapai, tak boleh buat tergesa-gesa. (Kementerian Kesihatan) ambil masa dua tahun untuk sediakan pelan induk yang akan ambil kira pandangan semua pihak berkaitan,” katanya selepas merasmikan Galeri De HomeBiz, di Great Eastern Mall, di sini semalam.

Kenyataan Liow mengesahkan laporan muka depan akhbar ini pada 3 Januari lalu mengenai cadangan kerajaan memperkenalkan skim 1Care bagi menambah baik sistem perkhidmatan kesihatan sedia ada dengan menggunakan model NHS di UK.

Antara objektif utama skim itu ialah memberi pilihan kepada rakyat mendapatkan rawatan di hospital kerajaan atau hospital swasta tanpa mengira kedudukan sosial dan kewangan mereka, selain mengurangkan beban hospital kerajaan yang menerima pesakit berlipat kali ganda berbanding hospital swasta

Melalui cadangan itu, kos penjagaan kesihatan rakyat akan ditanggung dana kesihatan nasional yang dibiayai melalui peruntukan kerajaan (lebih 90 peratus) dengan selebihnya disumbangkan individu berkemampuan sama ada melalui potongan cukai, bayaran premium insurans atau kaedah lain yang sedang dikaji.

Dana nasional itu akan diuruskan sebuah badan khas yang akan ditubuhkan dengan kos rawatan dan perubatan asas pesakit ditanggung oleh dana itu, tetapi pesakit mungkin dikenakan bayaran bersama sebagai komitmen, bergantung kepada jenis pesakit.

Sebelum ini, beberapa pihak antaranya, Gabungan Persatuan Pengguna-Pengguna Malaysia (FOMCA) dan Persatuan Perubatan Malaysia (MMA) mahu kerajaan menjelaskan secara terperinci cadangan skim itu, terutama membabitkan aspek kewangan dan pengurusan dana kesihatan nasional.

Liow berkata, kertas cadangan skim itu akan dibentangkan kepadanya bulan depan untuk diperhalusi sebelum dibawa kepada perhatian Kabinet.

Katanya, kementerian mengambil masa menyediakan pelan induk itu kerana ada pelbagai perkara yang perlu diperhalusi, walaupun kerajaan secara prinsip mengakui mengenai keperluan menambah baik sistem kesihatan negara berikutan pertambahan jumlah penghidap penyakit tidak berjangkit (NCD) di negara ini.

Katanya, peningkatan penghidap NCD semakin serius dengan RM1.3 bilion diperuntukkan tahun lalu untuk membeli ubat, selain kerajaan menubuhkan Jawatankuasa Kabinet Mengenai NCD bulan lalu untuk mengkaji serta mengambil tindakan perlu bagi mengatasi masalah itu.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

H1N1 Flu: Newer Perspectives...

2 recent papers in the electronic version of the Medical Journal of Australia give some clearer perspective as to where we are heading with this H1N1 flu.

Understanding Australia’s influenza pandemic policy on the strategic use of the antiviral drug stockpile

Life-threatening respiratory failure from H1N1 influenza 09 (human swine influenza)

Furthermore, WHO has just announced that the H1N1 flu is now unstoppable and is pushing for full vaccination programs to help cope with this pandemic.

Hopefully with many of the largest pharmaceutical companies all striving to devise this specific vaccine, we should have enough to go by, to supply all nations in need and not just the wealthy countries. After testing, it is expected that by year end, we should be able to mass vaccinate the public, at least those at high risks.

H1N1 is ‘unstoppable’, says WHO as it calls for vaccines

"Every country will need to vaccinate citizens against the swine flu virus and must choose who else would get priority after nurses, doctors and technicians," said Dr. Marie-Paule Kieny, WHO director of the Initiative for Vaccine Research.

Several reports showed the new virus attacks people differently than seasonal flu — affecting younger people, the severely obese and seemingly healthy adults, and causing disease deep in the lungs.

Interesting research by Dr. Yoshihiro Kawaoka suggests that this new H1N1 strain does not stay in the nose and throat, as do most seasonal viruses. Instead, the H1N1 virus replicates significantly better in the lungs. Other studies have also shown it can cause gastrointestinal effects (from one-fourth to half the cases so far), and that it targets people not usually thought of as being at high risk.

“Obesity has been observed to be one of the risk factors for more severe reaction to H1N1” — something never before seen, Kieny added. It is not clear if obese people may have undiagnosed health problems that make them susceptible, or if obesity in and of itself is a risk.

Last Friday, the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and the University of Michigan reported that nine out of 10 patients treated in an intensive care unit there were obese (6 had BMIs >35, and 3, >40). They also had unusual symptoms of blood clots in the lungs and multiple organ failure. None have recovered and three died.







Young children may also be at inreased risk, although it is still unclear if underlying predisposition or illness might have contributed to this. There is a curious possibility that the elderly (those born before 1920) who might have been exposed to earlier H1N1 viruses before may have a protective immunity effect from the current flu pandemic—thus, the very elderly so far appear not at increased risk.

One British doctor who was exposed to to a local transmission of the flu in England has also died, but details are sketchy as of now. Therefore, it behooves the medical fraternity to be very vigilant and cautious when handling cold or flu patients—we do not want to be at the receiving end of something so chancy and catastrophic!











Above is a frightening photograph of someone with a cold coughing and a thick cloud of cold virus being released and widely dispersed. A technique called Schlieren photography was used by Professor Gary Settles to show how a cough can spread the cold virus through the air.

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Sunday, June 28, 2009

H1N1: Contagion escalates, but caution still advocated...


Part of this article appeared in The Star 01 July 2009 as Caution can Save Lives and in Malaysiakini as Better Safe than Sorry on 30 June 2009.

Last Wednesday 24 June 2009, I attended the National Influenza Pandemic Task Force meeting chaired by the DG of Health, Tan Sri Dr Ismail Merican.

There remains fear that the H1N1 flu infection will continue to spread in the country, with most being imported cases, but with a steadily growing person to person spread becoming a reality. The plan is to try and contain and limit the contagion to as few people as possible and thus perhaps shield Malaysians from the worst aspects of this pandemic's potential lethality and socioeconomic perils.

As of June 26, the latest WHO statistics show that of 59,814 reported cases there have been 263 deaths — a mortality rate of 0.44%.

This is in contrast to two other high-profile global health threats of recent years. Avian Flu (influenza A(H5N1) had 433 reported cases and 262 deaths; while SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) had 8,096 reported cases and 774 deaths; thus their mortality rates are much higher at 61% and 9.6% respectively.

(Contrast this with our resurgent dengue fever; in the first half of this year, there were 23,057 dengue cases and 57 related deaths in Malaysia, i.e. 1 death in 404 cases or a case fatality of 0.25%.)

Not Really Much Ado about Nothing
Although some skeptics had brought up concerns that perhaps the response to this current pandemic is overblown or exaggerated, and that socio-economic implications remain still unrealised; the MOH and the DG pointed out correctly that while this may turn out to be true in the longer term, we just can't simply sit by and let this pandemic go without careful monitoring.

One very important and poignant point raised by the DG is that, if and when this pandemic turns out to be truly benign, then it's well and good. But consider the converse, if this flu became more lethal and many Malaysians then die, what then? Will the culpability for this potential disaster be equally shared for blame and recriminations? Indeed, will anyone then wish to take the rap, the responsibility?

In neighbouring Thailand, as of today, two among the hundreds infected have died, so this is not so benign after all. In the USA, CDC spokesperson, respiratory director Dr Ann Shuchart has stated that perhaps as many as 1 million Americans may have been infected with the H1N1 virus.

U.S. Passes Million Swine Flu Cases, Officials Say

Of the 27,717 laboratory-confirmed cases, about 3,000 Americans have been hospitalized, (their median age was quite young, just 19) and 127 have died; i.e. an in-hospital case fatality rate of 1 in 23, or 4.2%. Those who have died had a higher median age of 37 years, and when looked at in this way the actual in-hospital case fatality rate is around 2%.

But if we were to consider that the true number is perhaps just half as estimated, then 127 out of 500,000 exposed, is about as benign as the usual seasonal flu... Even if we considered just lab-confirmed cases, the case fatality rate would have been 0.45% or 1 in 218, very consistent with global figures.

Still, Malaysians are known to be very quick at pointing fingers and apportioning blame and vindictive censure. Many very vocal citizens are frequently irrationally strident and unforgiving, expecting that no authority or government can do any wrong!

Already there have been mutterings that we have not done enough. A recent letter No wonder A (H1N1) cases are on the rise stated that Singapore's surveillance methods are better and more visible, just because that person and their friends were not screened when crossing over the 2nd Tuas Link into Johor Bahru when returning. Yet they fail to note that the tiny nation state has already more than twice the number of cases of H1N1 infections than Malaysia, with even greater numbers of local transmission! Sadly, it's that inherent color of bias that our neighbour down south is always perceptibly better, whatever the raw unvarnished truth!

Hence, Malaysian health authorities have very limited options. Rigorous vigilance, close monitoring and being overly cautious might be the more prudent approach—yes, perhaps, this might cost us a bit of time, energy, resources and money in the beginning, but in the long term this would have been worth it—every life saved, is and should always be a correct public health measure! The question that begs to be answered is, at what cost?

It is true that many countries are loosening their surveillance programmes and are moving towards mitigation measures, which will help preserve resources and perhaps offer a more realistic approach to the pandemic.

Of course, everyone hopes that this flu will peter out after the initial wave of snuffles and fever subsides, if or when it does. But much remains to be seen, the unknowable remains as unpredictable as ever, and the possible future scenarios range from the most optimistically benign to the most catastrophic!

In the meantime, we can only help by assisting the MOH to respect and abide by the continually updated measures that are being rolled out on a day-to-day basis. At the very least, we can help by mitigating against the careless spread of this quite contagious virus, by scrupulous hygiene measures, and where necessary, by applying strict self-quarantine, if and when, anyone of us, might be possibly infected. Let's do our civic duty and be responsible and good citizens!

Fears of ‘second wave’ bug may be exaggerated

JUNE 27 — A new strain of the pandemic virus was identified in Shanghai in the middle of this month.

This, however, was reported by the media in mainland China only. The virus isolated from a 22-year-old Shanghai woman shows a significant mutation called E627K in the PB2 gene, one of the novel strain’s eight genes.

(A recent MIT study shows that without the PB2 gene, human viruses spread mainly by contact. Acquisition of the avian PB2 gene, however, enables them to transmit by air, which is why the pandemic strain is spreading so rapidly now.)

Before E627K appeared in the PB2 gene, PB2 was simply that which the pandemic strain had acquired from bird viruses. When E627K appeared, however, it meant that the PB2 gene was humanised or better adapted to people.

These genomic details can be confirmed on two free Internet databases. The expert who first noticed the E627K mutation in the Shanghai isolate noted that, in 1997, the H5N1 bird flu virus seen in Hong Kong which was very virulent in lab mice also carried E627K.

Dr Henry Niman of Pittsburgh-based Recombinomics, a private consultancy, told The Straits Times that, in 2003, the H7N7 bird flu virus that killed a veterinarian in the Netherlands had E627K as well.

Most importantly, the world’s only sample of the 1918 pandemic virus ever isolated from a patient also has E627K. This victim had been buried in Alaska (in permafrost) in November 1918 when the bug was killing people ferociously.

The Shanghai sample also shows another significant mutation, D701N, which is thought to augment E627K’s ability to infect humans. Does this Shanghai strain, which the United States authorities have now noted with little fanfare, presage a lethal second wave later this year?

It seems ominous. East Asia is ground zero for all flu virus mutations, a fact confirmed last month by two genomic studies. From Asia, mutated flu viruses are then spread by humans via air travel to both hemispheres. So E627K being detected in Shanghai first looks bad.

However, other experts remain sceptical: Whether the bug already had E627K in the spring and summer of 1918 when far fewer deaths were noted is not known. This is because there isn’t a single patient sample from that spring or summer to compare with the sole autumnal one available. Thus, one cannot conclude that it was E627K that turned the bug ferocious.

All that can be deduced is that E627K is associated with, not causal of, virulence. Likewise, E627K was also only associated with but not proven to cause the virulence in the 2003 Dutch case or the 1997 Hong Kong sample.

Until E627K is widely detected in a lethal second or third wave of the current pandemic, its relationship to virulence remains conjectural. More generally, the 1918 pandemic per se offers no genomic evidence that it was mutations after a mild spring or summer outbreak that caused the bug to turn ferocious.

Say, mutations were not responsible. What then might have caused the virulence in 1918? Perhaps, the poor nutritional status of all during wartime was crucial. At any rate, with no antibiotics available in that time period as yet, most deaths in 1918 were caused by untreated bacterial pneumonias in people already laid low by the flu. There were probably lots of pneumonia-causing bacteria like pneumococci, staphylococci or Haemophilus circulating in the poor hygiene.

Then there were also killers like tuberculosis, cholera and typhoid as well as other non-flu respiratory viruses which might have presented with flu-like illness but remained undiagnosed.

Some scientists now speculate that the use of high doses of aspirin advocated then might have been responsible too. Aspirin can cause Reye’s syndrome – a situation in which there is potentially fatal brain and liver swelling in children with viral infections. While aspirin is therefore avoided in childhood fevers nowadays, there are many aspirin derivatives.

In Mexico, such derivatives as diclofenac, mefenamic acid and ibuprofen are easily available. Not knowing that these are related to aspirin, parents tend to use them for fevers in children when paracetamol (branded Panadol here) fails to work. These may potentially have the same harmful effects. Did this cause Mexico’s high kill rates this year?

Here is an even more radical idea. Perhaps the bug never turned ferocious in the autumn of 1918 at all. Some experts are now arguing that, without lab confirmation of cause of death, the estimated number of deaths attributed to flu in late 1918 is imprecise. (The virus was first identified only in 1933.)

In fact, the idea of a “lethal second wave” came from a Journal of Infectious Diseases study published in January last year. However, this is merely one study using highly imprecise data from 1918 in but one city, Copenhagen. Amazingly, these experts say, this study alone has given rise to concerns about a lethal second wave, which may be less relevant today.

There are now antivirals and ventilators to treat bad flu cases; antibiotics for bacterial pneumonias; flu vaccines and personal protective equipment to prevent infection; better nutrition and sanitation; and, the public is better informed too.

The future may not be so bleak, after all. (Andy Ho – Straits Times, Singapore)