Illness Patterns, Utilisation of Health Services and the Use of Health Supplements among the Foreign Workers in Selected Areas of Peninsular Malaysia

This paper examines the result of a section on recent illness of the health survey among 799 foreign workers from three selected study locations. The main objective was to study illness or injury patterns and the utilisation of available health care services. It also attempts to examine the use of h...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ab Sallam, Atiya
Format: Article
Published: Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/24423/
https://jummec.um.edu.my/article/view/4492
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.um.eprints.24423
record_format eprints
spelling my.um.eprints.244232020-06-01T03:33:55Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/24423/ Illness Patterns, Utilisation of Health Services and the Use of Health Supplements among the Foreign Workers in Selected Areas of Peninsular Malaysia Ab Sallam, Atiya R Medicine This paper examines the result of a section on recent illness of the health survey among 799 foreign workers from three selected study locations. The main objective was to study illness or injury patterns and the utilisation of available health care services. It also attempts to examine the use of health supplements as an indicator of self-care. Findings indicate that the illness or injury rate was 46.6%. The illness or injury rate increased with age and was highest in the 45-54 age group (65.0%) and among the Thai workers (69.6%). The main illnesses reported were injuries and accidents (19.6%), musculoskeletal problems (18.0%) and gastrointestinal complaints (16.7%), and it varied with gender, age and nationality. Almost 90% of the foreign workers sought treatment at modern health care facilities, with a third utilising government health care services. The employers contributed towards 60% of all the treatment costs. Nearly a third of the foreign workers took health supplements, and the rates were higher among the younger age group (40.0%) and among the Indonesian workers (52.0%). Majority had obtained the health supplements from the pharmacies or retail shops (43.3%) and private health care facilities (35.4%), and about 70% paid out of their own pocket. Some of the implications and limitations of these findings are discussed. Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya 2002-06 Article PeerReviewed Ab Sallam, Atiya (2002) Illness Patterns, Utilisation of Health Services and the Use of Health Supplements among the Foreign Workers in Selected Areas of Peninsular Malaysia. Journal of the University of Malaya Medical Centre (JUMMEC), 7 (1). pp. 28-39. ISSN 1823-7339 https://jummec.um.edu.my/article/view/4492
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Ab Sallam, Atiya
Illness Patterns, Utilisation of Health Services and the Use of Health Supplements among the Foreign Workers in Selected Areas of Peninsular Malaysia
description This paper examines the result of a section on recent illness of the health survey among 799 foreign workers from three selected study locations. The main objective was to study illness or injury patterns and the utilisation of available health care services. It also attempts to examine the use of health supplements as an indicator of self-care. Findings indicate that the illness or injury rate was 46.6%. The illness or injury rate increased with age and was highest in the 45-54 age group (65.0%) and among the Thai workers (69.6%). The main illnesses reported were injuries and accidents (19.6%), musculoskeletal problems (18.0%) and gastrointestinal complaints (16.7%), and it varied with gender, age and nationality. Almost 90% of the foreign workers sought treatment at modern health care facilities, with a third utilising government health care services. The employers contributed towards 60% of all the treatment costs. Nearly a third of the foreign workers took health supplements, and the rates were higher among the younger age group (40.0%) and among the Indonesian workers (52.0%). Majority had obtained the health supplements from the pharmacies or retail shops (43.3%) and private health care facilities (35.4%), and about 70% paid out of their own pocket. Some of the implications and limitations of these findings are discussed.
format Article
author Ab Sallam, Atiya
author_facet Ab Sallam, Atiya
author_sort Ab Sallam, Atiya
title Illness Patterns, Utilisation of Health Services and the Use of Health Supplements among the Foreign Workers in Selected Areas of Peninsular Malaysia
title_short Illness Patterns, Utilisation of Health Services and the Use of Health Supplements among the Foreign Workers in Selected Areas of Peninsular Malaysia
title_full Illness Patterns, Utilisation of Health Services and the Use of Health Supplements among the Foreign Workers in Selected Areas of Peninsular Malaysia
title_fullStr Illness Patterns, Utilisation of Health Services and the Use of Health Supplements among the Foreign Workers in Selected Areas of Peninsular Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Illness Patterns, Utilisation of Health Services and the Use of Health Supplements among the Foreign Workers in Selected Areas of Peninsular Malaysia
title_sort illness patterns, utilisation of health services and the use of health supplements among the foreign workers in selected areas of peninsular malaysia
publisher Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya
publishDate 2002
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/24423/
https://jummec.um.edu.my/article/view/4492
_version_ 1669007999833735168
score 13.160551