This document summarizes the author's experience on their four-week elective placement at Hospital Sultanah Aminah in Johor Bahru, Malaysia. As the main public hospital in the state, the author was exposed to a wide variety of surgical cases, especially in vascular surgery. A typical day involved ward rounds, patient examinations, procedures, and observing some surgeries. The author also attended classes at Monash University Malaysia. The biggest challenge was communicating with patients who did not speak English. However, the author gained proficiency in Malay and Mandarin. Overall, the elective provided valuable lessons about different healthcare systems and the impact of factors like funding on patient care between Malaysia and the UK.
This document summarizes the author's experience on their four-week elective placement at Hospital Sultanah Aminah in Johor Bahru, Malaysia. As the main public hospital in the state, the author was exposed to a wide variety of surgical cases, especially in vascular surgery. A typical day involved ward rounds, patient examinations, procedures, and observing some surgeries. The author also attended classes at Monash University Malaysia. The biggest challenge was communicating with patients who did not speak English. However, the author gained proficiency in Malay and Mandarin. Overall, the elective provided valuable lessons about different healthcare systems and the impact of factors like funding on patient care between Malaysia and the UK.
This document summarizes the author's experience on their four-week elective placement at Hospital Sultanah Aminah in Johor Bahru, Malaysia. As the main public hospital in the state, the author was exposed to a wide variety of surgical cases, especially in vascular surgery. A typical day involved ward rounds, patient examinations, procedures, and observing some surgeries. The author also attended classes at Monash University Malaysia. The biggest challenge was communicating with patients who did not speak English. However, the author gained proficiency in Malay and Mandarin. Overall, the elective provided valuable lessons about different healthcare systems and the impact of factors like funding on patient care between Malaysia and the UK.
This document summarizes the author's experience on their four-week elective placement at Hospital Sultanah Aminah in Johor Bahru, Malaysia. As the main public hospital in the state, the author was exposed to a wide variety of surgical cases, especially in vascular surgery. A typical day involved ward rounds, patient examinations, procedures, and observing some surgeries. The author also attended classes at Monash University Malaysia. The biggest challenge was communicating with patients who did not speak English. However, the author gained proficiency in Malay and Mandarin. Overall, the elective provided valuable lessons about different healthcare systems and the impact of factors like funding on patient care between Malaysia and the UK.
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Introduction
I was attached to the general surgical ward in Hospital Sultanah Aminah
throughout my four weeks of elective posting. Hospital Sultanah Aminah is the main government-funded general hospital for the town of Johor Bahru, which is the capital of the southernmost state in Peninsular Malaysia. As Hospital Sultanah Aminah is the main tertiary health centre for the state of Johor, I was able to gain exposure to a wide variety of surgical conditions, especially in the field of vascular surgery as my supervisor is a consultant vascular surgeon. A typical day usually involves starting the day by joining the ward rounds, talking to patients and examining them, performing simple procedures such as venepuncture, attending clinics at surgical outpatient and also observing some surgeries. As this hospital is a teaching hospital for Monash University Malaysia, I also joined some of their classes. The challenging part of this electives would be the language as almost all patients do not speak English. At first I find it difficult to do proper history taking using Malay and Mandarin, but after a few attempts I started to get more proficient in it and I feel it was a good practice for my future career.
Reflection
I think the biggest learning experience for me from this elective is to be
able to appreciate the impact of different healthcare systems on patient care. After experiencing the well-funded public healthcare system in UK for a year, coming back to Malaysia allowed me to make better and more educated comparison with the two-tier system in my home country. As Malaysia is still a developing country, the government has only enough funding to provide healthcare to those who need it the most, which are the low-income group of citizens, though technically every citizen can access public healthcare if he or she desires. In most instances, the close- to-being-free public healthcare (only a minimal sum is needed for hospital stays and consultations) provides a good standard of care to patients, but the issue of money is still a very real concern in certain disease management as not all treatments are equally subsidised. Monetary issues have a strong influence in many cases, with examples like a patient who had varicose vein ulcer could not afford the three-layer bandage and got a normal dressing instead, a patient who had to get discharged and admitted multiple times for dialysis out of the hospital because it was not funded by the hospital and a patient who delayed her surgery to acquire funds for the stent needed to treat the pseudoaneurysm in her arm. It is quite disheartening for me to learn that even now money can still be the barrier in providing the appropriate care to a patient. Learning in the UK had instilled in me that we should provide the best care with the available resources, but it never occurred to me this is a luxury not enjoyed in my home country and the ethical principles of justice and beneficence come to mind whenever a doctor has to delay or withhold treatment due to entirely non-medical related issues. I suppose this can also explain the different attitudes towards healthcare seeking I observed from the two countries. People in the UK generally consult their doctors more readily either when they are ill or when they simply need professional opinions on their health. This is in contrast with Malaysians where they tend to delay seeking help up till the point where they cannot bear the symptoms due to a choice of appalling waiting times in the public healthcare or exorbitant fees in private healthcare. Another interesting difference from my point of view is the patient-doctor relationship. I think patients in the UK generally holds greater responsibility towards their own health and they respect their doctors as professionals who will guide but not dictate the interventions they need. In Malaysia, doctors are deemed as esteemed professionals and patients listen to what they are told, yet the interesting bit of this paternal relationship is that many patients listen to but do not do what they are told. The analogy is like that of between a teacher and a rebellious teen, where the patients know the doctors meant the best, but the inconvenience of an intervention still outweighs the complications that will occur in the future due to a general lack of disease understanding and a slight mistrust towards Western medicine. An example I saw was a man who simply refused to wear the hernia belt after an inguinal hernia repair even though he knew it prevents re-occurrences. I think generally this electives had made me much more aware of the non- medical side of being a doctor where understanding factors such as culture, language, logistics, funding and attitude are equally important to medical knowledge in providing a good quality care. Regardless of the differences, I think all doctors strive to provide the best care possible no matter the country they work in.