Original Article
Unplanned hospitalisations among subsidised nursing home residents in Singapore: Insights from a data linkage study
Hospitalisations pose hazards and safety risks to nursing home (NH) residents who may be frail, cognitively impaired, suffering from multi-morbidities and physically dependent,1 with propensity to develop adverse outcomes such as functional, psychological or cognitive decline, iatrogenic complications, and be subjected to over-investigation.2 There is an imperative for health...
Original Article
Enhancing guidelines for managing cognitively impaired drivers: Insights from Western evidence for Asian adaptation
Licensing authorities rely on medical certifications of fitness-to-drive when renewing licence for drivers who are at higher risk of crashes. Drivers with cognitive impairment are 2 to 8 times more likely to be involved in a crash compared to those without such impairments,1 and studies show they have a...
Original Article
Impact of family and caregiver factors on development and behaviours in maltreated young children
Child maltreatment is defined as the neglect and abuse of children under 18 years old. It encompasses physical/emotional ill-treatment, sexual abuse, negligence and/or exploitation that causes harm to the child.1 Evidence has shown that Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), such as maltreatment experienced during childhood, have a significant impact on...
Original Article
Assessing the impact of frailty in elderly patients undergoing emergency laparotomies in Singapore
The ageing population is a growing global phenomenon. In 2019, 14.4% of the population in Singapore, equivalent to 3.9 million people, were aged 65 years or older.1 This percentage is expected to increase to 25% by 2030, primarily due to increased life expectancy and lower fertility rates.1 Consequently, older...
Editorial
The value of frailty assessments in older surgical patients undergoing emergency laparotomies in Singapore
Mortality in emergency laparotomy (EL) far exceeds that of elective bowel surgery, and standards for the National Emergency Laparotomy Audit (NELA) in the UK were introduced due to the high mortality within 1 month of EL.1 In Singapore, 30-day mortality varies between 5.4% and 14.7% after EL.2,3 However, 30-day...
Original Article
Anti-osteoporosis drugs reduce mortality in cancer patients: A national cohort study of elderly with vertebral fractures
Osteoporotic vertebral fractures (OVFs) are the most prevalent type of fragility fractures, affecting 25% of adults in their early 70s and 43% of those over the age of 80.1,2 Following an OVF, persistence of the vertebral deformity may lead to spinal kyphosis, which is associated with chronic lower back...
Editorial
Anti-osteoporosis drugs and reduction of mortality in cancer patients
Osteoporosis and cancer share a complex relationship, with each condition influencing the progression and outcomes of the other.1 Multiple factors, such as chemo- and hormonal therapies, and the direct invasion of bone tissue by malignant cells contribute to the accelerated bone loss seen in cancer patients.1 Various anti-osteoporosis drugs,...
Letter to the Editor
Impact of an ageing population on the intensive care unit
Dear Editor,
Intensive care unit (ICU) resources are scarce and expensive, and deciding if intensive care is suitable for older patients involves complex clinical reasoning, ethical challenges and cost considerations. Although some studies show that ICU mortality increases with age, others suggest that age alone is not predictive of poor...
Letter to the Editor
Emergency department falls interventions improve osteoporosis management in frail older adults
Dear Editor,
Singapore’s population is ageing rapidly and by 2030, around 1 in 4 citizens will be aged 65 and above.1 Older adults represent 21–40% of emergency department (ED) users and proportionally are the highest users of ED services.2
One-third of community dwellers over 65 years of age fall each year,...
Original Article
Transitional care strategies at emergency department for elderly patients: A multicentre study in Singapore
In Singapore, greater efforts are being directed towards developing an integrated health and social ecosystem under the new Healthier SG strategy announced by the Ministry of Health. This life-course approach aims to promote overall healthier living in collaboration with key community partners (e.g. intermediate and long-term care service providers)...
Letter to the Editor
A strategy to make COVID-19 vaccination more accessible to the elderly
Dear Editor,
Singapore embarked on the COVID-19 National Vaccination Programme in early 2021. The main modality employed to achieve the mass vaccinations has been the Vaccination Centres (VCs). These are dedicated facilities created with the sole purpose of providing the public with safe and convenient access to vaccination services.
While the...
Review Article
Nutrition therapy in the older critically ill patients: A scoping review
The increasing levels of life expectancy and decreasing fertility are shifting the age structure of the world population towards older ages.1 From year 2020 to 2050, population aged ≥65 years is expected to rise from 9.3% to 16%.1 The number of older intensive care unit (ICU) patients are expected...
Editorial
ICU nutrition: Bracing for the silver tsunami
The global population’s life expectancy is growing with a steady increase in the proportion of older patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU).1 Up to 13% of the ICU patients are above the age of 80.2 Older critically ill patients have lower physiological reserves of the various organ...
Original Article
Cost analysis of a Patient-Centred Medical Home for community-dwelling older adults with complex needs in Singapore
The Patient-Centred Medical Home (PCMH) is a model of chronic care that replaces episodic primary care, with the delivery of primary care to patients, families and communities. It is guided by the principles of first-contact accessibility, comprehensiveness and whole-person orientation, integration and care coordination, sustained clinician-patient relationships, and quality...
Review Article
Determinants of emergency department utilisation by older adults in Singapore: A systematic review
Older adults in Singapore contribute to a disproportionately higher number of visits to the emergency department (ED), mirroring trends around the world.1,2 For instance, hospital admissions among those aged ≥65 years have been on the rise from 2018 to 2020, contributing a growing burden to ED services over the...
Original Article
A Descriptive Study of the Demography, Symptomology, Management and Outcome of the First 300 Patients Admitted to an Independent Hospice in Singapore
Modern society views death as an aberration which has to be postponed and, if possible, prevented at all cost. Death is just unacceptable and cannot be regarded as a natural process of life.
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Original Article
Radiotherapy as Local Adjuvant Treatment for Endometrial Carcinoma—A Review of 45 Patients
Radiotherapy as an adjunct to surgery has long been used in the management of endometrial carcinoma with the intent to improve local tumour control as well as to achieve excellent survival rates. Over the years, however, the specific role and relative benefit of postoperative radiotherapy for this particular cancer...
Original Article
Day Hospital Rehabilitation for the Elderly: A Retrospective Study
Alexandra Hospital is the first hospital in Singapore with a Day Hospital for the elderly. One of the main functions of the Day Hospital is to rehabilitate the disabled elderly.
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Original Article
Self-Perception of Health among Elderly Community Dwellers in Singapore
The single most important determinant of the quality of an elderly person’s life is health. In the elderly, health matters affect all other areas of life, including his willing ness to seek and accept help.
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Others
Chryseobacterium meningosepticum (Flavobacterium meningosepticum)—A Report of Five Cases in a Local Hospital
Chryseobacterium meningosepticum has been known to be a causative agent of meningitis particularly in the premature and newborn infants. The first case of human infection with this organism was reported by King in 1959.
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Others
Bilateral Caudate Infarct—A Case Report
The head of caudate nucleus forms a prominent bulge in the lateral wall of the anterior horn of the lateral ventricle. Its blood supply is from the deep penetrators from the middle cerebral and anterior cerebral arteries.
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Original Article
Perceived Need for Community Geriatric Services: A Survey at a Regional Hospital in Singapore in an Inpatient Setting
Singapore has one of the most rapidly ageing populations in the wor1d. The number of the very aged (>75 years old) has already increased from 42,700 in 1985 to 75,500 in 1995.
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Original Article
Swallowing Impairment and Feeding Dependency in the Hospitalised Elderly
Loss of ability to feed independently and swallowing impairment are common problems in the elderly and will be an increasing cause of disability as the population ages. A study in Europe suggested that up to 10% of people older than 50 experience troublesome dysphagia.
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Original Article
The Reliability and Validity of the Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale Cognitive Subscale (ADAS-Cog) among the Elderly Chinese in Hong Kong
The Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS) is a 21-item scale designed to assess the severity of cognitive and non-cognitive impairment in patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD).
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Original Article
Screening for Hearing Impairment in Hospitalised Elderly
The prevalence of hearing impairment in the local elderly population is not known. Hearing loss prevalence estimates that 25% to 40% of individuals over 65 years of age are hearing impaired. However, there is no universal agreement on the definition of “normal hearing” and comparison between studies that report...
Original Article
End-of-life Issues—Preferences and Choices of a Group of Elderly Chinese Subjects Attending a Day Care Centre in Singapore
Doctors caring for elderly, dying and terminally ill patients are often faced with the dilemma of having to make difficult decisions especially regarding treatment where the benefit and burden is not clearly defined. Issues relating to death and dying, such as whether to disclose the diagnosis and prognosis to...
Commentary
Preparing for the silver boom: A falls prevention tool for older adults in the emergency department
Each year, 28–35% of community dwelling adults over 65 years fall.1 This figure increases to about 50% for those above 80 years old.2 Falls also account for 85% of all geriatric trauma presenting to the emergency department (ED) in Singapore,3 with the crude incidence rate of unintentional falls at...
Editorial
Delirium in patients following general anaesthesia
Delirium is a disturbance of consciousness characterised by an acute onset and fluctuating course of inattention, accompanied by either a change in cognition or a disorganised thinking, resulting in an impaired ability of the patient to receive, process, store and recall information. Delirium develops over a short period of...
Original Article
Critical Role of Functional Decline in Delayed Discharge from an Acute Geriatric Unit
In the last decade, many countries have experienced alarming transformation in their demographic patterns, with the elderly population emerging as the fastest growing segment of the population. Owing to their generally poorer health status in terms of chronic illnesses and long-term disability, the elderly consume a disproportionate amount of...
Original Article
Urinary Retention in Hospitalised Older Women
Voiding dysfunction is a relatively common problem in hospitalised older patients. Up to one-third of hospitalised elderly were reported to have post-void residual urine volume (PRUV) of more than 50 mL.
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Others
Comparison of Allergic Contact Dermatitis Cases in the Private and Subsidised Clinics in the National Skin Centre, Singapore
Allergic contact dermatitis is a common clinical problem seen in our dermatology outpatient clinics, comprising 0.5% of patients seen in 1999. In addition to our contact dermatitis clinic and occupational dermatosis clinic which caters to subsidised patients, many patients have also been worked up and patch tested in the...
Original Article
Body Mass Index and Its Related Factors in the Elderly
Cardiovascular disease is one of the leading causes of mortality and morbidity in developed countries, especially among the elderly. In Taiwan, cardiovascular disease is the third leading cause of death after neoplasm and cerebrovascular disease.
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Original Article
The Practice of Foregoing Life Support in the Critically Ill “Old Old”: A Singapore Perspective
Studies on the foregoing of life support (FLS) in North America, Europe and Australia have shown diversity in terms of the incidence, decision-making process and outcome. However, they have not specifically looked into such practice in the elderly.
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Review Article
The Impact of Swallowing Disorders in the Elderly
In 1898, Bastian first reported on the case of a man who had been admitted to hospital with hemiplegia and aphasia, but who had transient difficulty in deglutition. Necropsy revealed that apart from two limited lesions in the left hemisphere, the patient’s brain was normal.
This article is available only...
Original Article
Problems Related to Epidural Analgesia for Postoperative Pain Control
Epidural analgesia has been shown to provide excellent pain relief following thoracotomy, abdominal and other surgery. Studies have shown improvement in specific variables with epidural analgesia; and effective postoperative pain relief is a prerequisite to attain improved postoperative outcome.
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Original Article
Epidemiology of Beta-haemolytic Group G Streptococcal Bacteraemia in Singapore (1996 to 1998)
Human isolates of group G streptococci (GGS) that form large colonies are similar to group A streptococci (GAS) in terms of virulence and cause a range of serious infections. These included infective endocarditis which had been emphasised in older reports1 but was found to be uncommon in later studies.
This...
Original Article
Correlates of Habitual Walking and Sports/Leisure-time Physical Activity in Older Persons in Singapore: Interaction Effects Between Educational Attainment and Gender
Physical inactivity has been identified as a major cause of morbidity and mortality secondary to cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus and hypertension. It contributes to the loss of physiological and psychological capabilities that result in overall reduction in function and independent living.
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Original Article
Nursing Home Falls: A Local Perspective
Falls in the elderly has been a well-studied subject and now occupies an important place in geriatric medicine. While many studies have been done on falls in community-dwelling elderly, relatively few studies have focused on the problem in institutionalised elderly.
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Original Article
Bedside Clinical Methods Useful as Screening Test for Aspiration in Elderly Patients with Recent and Previous Strokes
Cerebrovascular disease is the fifth commonest cause of hospitalisation in Singapore, and accounts for 2.7% of all hospital discharges. Neurogenic dysphagia is a common complication of stroke disease and it has been shown that post stroke dysphagic patients have 6.95 times higher risk of developing pneumonia when compared to...
Review Article
End-of-life Care: Challenges and Obligations in Setting Limits to Life-sustaining Therapy
A patient with recurrent stroke disease and severe pneumonia did not respond to the previous courses of antibiotics. The medical team decided to switch to another broad-spectrum antibiotic.
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Review Article
Considerations in the Assessment and Management of Older People with Chronic Pain
Persistent pain has been estimated to occur in 50% of community dwelling older people of age 65 years and above. It has been associated with multiple functional and psychological complications.
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Review Article
Late-life Depression: Current Issues and New Challenges
Depression in late life (>60 years old) is one of the most common and treatable psychiatric disorders in the elderly. It not only causes distress and suffering, but leads to impairment of physical, mental and social functioning, worsens prognosis for certain medical conditions, aggravates suicidal risk and increases utilisation...
Review Article
Neurofibrillary and Ethico-legal Tangles: In Search of Surrogates for Dementia Patients Lacking Decision-making Capacity and Relatives
Dementia is an age-prevalent chronic degenerative disease that causes gradual and progressive deterioration of a patient’s cognitive abilities. With Singapore’s rapidly ageing population, the prevalence of dementia has been rising inevitably and steadily.
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Review Article
Assessing Decision-making Capacity in Dementia Patients: A Semi-structured Approach
Given the rapid ageing of Singapore, all practising clinicians can expect to see an exponential rise in the medical and surgical problems of the elderly. One such condition is dementia.
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Review Article
An Evidence-based Clinical Approach to the Diagnosis of Dementia
The prevalence of dementia or cognitive impairment in local studies has been shown to range from 2% to 13%. These differences in prevalence rates depend very much on the sensitivities of the different locally validated cognitive screening instruments used, as some may be better at detecting early dementia and,...
Review Article
Urinary Incontinence in Older Persons: A Simple Approach to a Complex Problem
Urinary incontinence is the involuntary loss of urine which is objectively demonstrable and is a social or hygienic problem. Trivial as it may sound, it is in fact a major geriatric syndrome which may pose as major public health threat with increasing magnitude in this ageing society, due to...
Review Article
The Development of Geriatric Psychiatry Services in Singapore
The population of Singapore is ageing. In 2002, it was estimated that there were 252,700 persons aged >65 years, forming 7.5% of the population. By 2030, there will be 794,000, forming 18.4% of the population.
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Review Article
Aged Care Issues and Services in Australia
In Australia, the number of elderly people is increasing rapidly. In 2001, the population of Australia was approximately 19 million people and about 12.6% of this population were >65 years old.
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Review Article
Aged Care Services in Singapore – An Overview
The last century has witnessed the establishment of geriatric medicine as a well-recognised medical specialty supported by a respectable body of evidence, which shows that it is able to improve the health outcomes of frail older persons. Since the pioneering work of Marjory Warren in the 1930s, different models...
Editorial
Challenges in Geriatric Medicine: Geriatric Services and Education
Ignatz Nascher first proposed disease and medical care of the aged as a separate specialty and invented the term “geriatrics” in 1909. However, the growth of geriatric medicine and healthcare of the elderly is often attributed to the pioneering work of Majorie Warren who successfully treated and rehabilitated seemingly...
Others
Emergency Department Usage by Community Step-Down Facilities – Patterns and Recommendations
It is projected that elderly persons will make up 18.4% of Singapore’s population by the year 2030. Currently, there are 5189 residents staying in nursing homes.
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Others
Critically Ill Elderly Who Require Mechanical Ventilation: The Effects of Age on Survival Outcomes and Resource Utilisation in the Medical Intensive Care Unit of a General Hospital
Increasing life expectancy and ageing of the “post-war baby boomer” generation have led to the rapidly ageing demographic of many Asian countries. Singapore’s elderly population above the age of 65 will rise from 7.5% in 2002 to 18.9% by the year 2030.
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Original Article
Thyroid Dysfunction in Elderly Patients
Symptoms and signs of thyroid dysfunction in the elderly tend to be atypical and may be mistakenly attributed to the ageing process. Currently, thyroid function tests are performed on patients who manifest signs and symptoms of overt thyroid disease or as part of the investigations for dementia in the...
Original Article
Improving the Diagnosis Related Grouping Model’s Ability to Explain Length of Stay of Elderly Medical Inpatients by Incorporating Function-linked Variables
Casemix refers to the numbers and types of patients within a healthcare setting and Diagnosis Related Groupings (DRGs) represent one mode of classifying casemix. In essence, DRGs are categories of clinically meaningful patient conditions which require similar levels of hospital resources for their treatment.
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Original Article
Impact of a Pharmacist Consult Clinic on a Hospital-based Geriatric Outpatient Clinic in Singapore
A general philosophy in the care of elderly patients is to use the least drugs possible to achieve the desired clinical outcome. In the United States (US), however, although patients >65 years old represent only 13% of the total population, they consume nearly 30% of all prescription medications.
This article...
Original Article
Polypharmacy and Inappropriate Medication Use in Singapore Nursing Homes
The elderly usually have multiple medical problems, requiring prescription drugs to treat diseases and to prevent complications arising from them. Currently, in the United States, those who are 65 years and older (geriatric age group) make up 13% of the total population but consume 33% of all prescription drugs.
This...
Original Article
Evaluation of Dementia: The Case for Neuroimaging All Mild to Moderate Cases
Dementia has been reported to affect 4% to 13% of individuals above the age of 65, with the difference in prevalence rates being dependent on the screening tools used and the criteria adopted for the diagnosis of dementia. The evaluation of any individual presenting with suspected dementia has a...
Original Article
Are Sensory and Cognitive Declines Associated in Older Persons Seeking Aged Care Services? Findings From a Pilot Study
Many cross-sectional and longitudinal studies have reported an association between sensory and cognitive functions in the normal ageing population. Few studies have assessed the association between sensory and cognitive impairment as most studies on cognitive ageing excluded those with sensory and cognitive impairments.
This article is available only as a...
Original Article
Factors Causing Delay in Discharge of Elderly Patients in an Acute Care Hospital
With the introduction of block budget for acute care hospitals, cost containment is an important issue for all secondary and tertiary hospitals. Though health care cost was rising at a rate of 31.2% between the year 2002 and 2003, it is important to keep the cost of health care...
Original Article
Factors Associated With Functional Decline of Hospitalised Older Persons Following Discharge From an Acute Geriatric Unit
Hospitalisation is a stressful event for the older person. The physiological changes associated with ageing, such as decreased muscle strength and aerobic activity, reduced bone density, altered appetite and tendency towards urinary incontinence, predispose older patients to complications during hospitalisation. Studies have shown that about one-third of older persons...
Original Article
Attitudes of First-year Medical Students in Singapore Towards Older People and Willingness to Consider a Career in Geriatric Medicine
With the exponential increase in the elderly population in Singapore, the training of young physicians of tomorrow in the care of elderly patients will need to change accordingly. A potential way to fulfill this need is to increase the number of specialists proportionately to manage elderly patients effectively.
This article...
Editorial
Alzheimer’s Disease – Towards More Patient-centred and Meaningful Clinical Outcomes
More than 100 years ago Alois Alzheimer first presented the clinical and pathological features of an unusual brain disease at his seminal lecture in Tübingen. The patient, Auguste Deter, suffered memory loss, disorientation, hallucinations and died at an early age of 55.
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Original Article
Hip Fractures in the Elderly: The Impact of Comorbid Illnesses on Hospitalisation Costs
Management of hip fractures is costly and continues to generate significant costs throughout the one-year period after discharge.1 They demand considerable resources from a country’s health care system.2,3 Hip fractures are the commonest cause for admission in the acute orthopaedics setting in the elderly.4 As a result of an...
Commentary
A Review of Geriatric Education in Singapore
The United Nations International Plan of Action on Ageing (IPA), formulated during the First World Assembly on Ageing in Vienna in 1982, listed gerontological education at all levels as a priority in order to meet the challenges of global population ageing.1 The Second World Assembly on Ageing held in...
Original Article
Resource Consumption in Hospitalised, Frail Older Patients
The number of older adults in Singapore has been steadily increasing over the years and will continue to do so. In 2007, older adults aged 65 years and above accounted for 8.5% of the total population and by the year 2030, it is estimated that this group will account...
Original Article
Validity and Reliability of the Zarit Burden Interview in Assessing Caregiving Burden
Dementia is a growing public health issue in the Asia-Pacific region. The number of people with dementia in the Asia-Pacific region will increase from 13.7 million people in 2005 to 64.6 million people in 2050.
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Original Article
Profiling Acute Presenting Symptoms of Geriatric Patients Attending an Urban Hospital Emergency Department
Singapore’s population is ageing rapidly. Today 1 out of every 12 Singaporeans is aged 65 or above. In 2030, it is expected to be 1 out of 5.1 This poses a challenge to our healthcare system especially our emergency departments.
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Original Article
Validity and Reliability of the Expectations Regarding Aging (ERA-12) Instrument among Middle-Aged Singaporeans
With increasing life expectancy and low fertility rates, the proportion of the elderly is rapidly increasing in developed nations, Singapore being no exception. The elderly (over 65 years) population in Singapore is expected to grow from 7.2% in 2000 to 18.4% by 2030.
This article is available only as a...
Original Article
Junior Doctors’ Attitudes Towards Older Adults and its Correlates in a Tertiary-care Public Hospital
Singapore is a rapidly ageing society. The proportion of older persons above the age of 65 was 6.8% of the population in 1995 and is projected to increase to 20% by the year 2030. The medical community is also faced with a similar problem in caring for an ageing...
Original Article
Clinical Outcome Following Treatment of Stable and Unstable Intertrochanteric Fractures with Dynamic Hip Screw
Intertrochanteric (IT) fracture is among the most common orthopedic injuries in the elderly population, and is associated with osteoporosis. It usually occurs as a result of low energy trauma e.g. trivial falls. It carries considerable morbidity and mortality. In Singapore, there has been an increase in the incidence of...
Original Article
Older Age at Initial Presentation to Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Care and Treatment at the Communicable Disease Centre (CDC) in Singapore, 2006 to 2011
Since the first case of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Singapore was identified in 1985, the incidence of HIV/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has steadily increased, reaching a peak rate of 125.2 cases per million population in 2008. From 2006 to 2011, 28.3% of newly diagnosed HIV/AIDS cases in Singapore...
Original Article
Can Preoperative Scoring Systems be Applied to Asian Hip Fracture Populations? Validation of the Nottingham Hip Fracture Score (NHFS) and Identification of Preoperative Risk Factors in Hip Fractures
Osteoporotic hip fractures are common and have significant consequences on mortality and functional capability which indirectly has familial, social and economic repercussions. The inpatient mortality rates approach 4% to 12%, while 1-year mortality is between 12% to 37%.2, Studies from Denmark, Italy, the United Kingdom (UK), and the United...
Original Article
Neonatal and Paediatric Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) in a Single Asian Tertiary Centre
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is a cardiopulmonary bypass technique (CPB) introduced by Bartlett in 1972, which provides life-saving support in patients with refractory yet reversible cardiorespiratory failure until organ recovery or organ transplantation. Since the first report of successful ECMO support in an adult was published by Hill in...
Clinical Update
Anticoagulation Needs in Asians with Atrial Fibrillation: A Mythbuster
Atrial fibrillation (AF) increases the risk of stroke 5-fold in Caucasians. While the relative risk for stroke is somewhat lower in Asia, estimated at 3.6% in Singapore, total AF and stroke-associated mortality rates are reported to be similar.
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Editorial
Successful Ageing in Singapore—A Viable Goal?
Ageing is a complex process. Achieving it successfully has implications and significance not only for individuals on a personal level but for society at large, where demographic
changes and population consequences pose significant clinical and public health issues.
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Review Article
Changing Landscape of Nursing Homes in Singapore: Challenges in the 21st Century
Nursing homes trace their evolution to American alms-houses in the 1930s where retired nurses welcomed the elderly and ill into their homes. In Singapore, community-based charitable organisations pioneered the earliest sheltered accommodations for homeless and destitute elderly immigrants. For instance, the local chapter of the Little Sisters of the...
Original Article
Determinants of Health-Related Quality of Life Among Community Dwelling Elderly
Singapore is experiencing an unprecedented age shift as the post-war baby boomers turn 65 years in 2012. Currently there are 378,700 people aged 65 and above, and these numbers are estimated to go up to 600,000 by 2020. These growing elderly population have multiple coexisting medical conditions which are...
Original Article
Unipolar versus Bipolar Hemiarthroplasty for Displaced Femoral Neck Fractures in the Elderly: Is There a Difference?
Hip hemiarthoplasties are commonly performed for displaced femoral neck fractures. The advantages of hemiarthroplasty over internal fixation include earlier mobility, less reoperations and better functional outcome at 1 year.
Considerable differences of opinion exists regarding the choice between unipolar and bipolar designs. The main theoretical advantage of a bipolar over...
Letter to the Editor
Diagnosing Bacteraemia Early in Older Adults
Sepsis is a prevalent and important cause of morbidity and mortality in the general population. Approximately 750,000 patients in the United States alone develop severe sepsis each year. Of this, more than 60% are patients older than 65 years. Morbidity and mortality remain high in spite of advances in...
Original Article
Anti-BP180 NC16A IgG Titres as an Indicator of Disease Activity and Outcome in Asian Patients with Bullous Pemphigoid
Bullous pemphigoid (BP) is a subepidermal blistering dermatosis characterised by circulating autoantibodies targeting BP180 and BP230 hemidesmosomal proteins. Anti-BP180 NC16A IgG antibodies have been demonstrated to be directly pathogenic in blister formation. Anti-BP180 IgG titres were noted to parallel disease activity in several case series, as well as reflect...
Editorial
A Decade of Progress in the Understanding, Prevention and Treatment of Age-related Macular Degeneration in Singapore
The year 2014 had marked the 10th anniversary of the nationwide Age-related Macular Degeneration (AMD) Awareness Week in Singapore.1 This public health campaign, organised annually since 2005, aims to generate awareness and understanding of AMD by promoting the importance of education, early detection, and knowledge of treatment and rehabilitation...
Editorial
Evidence-balanced Medicine: “Real” Evidence-based Medicine in the Elderly
Case 1: An 85-year-old male with past history of hypertension is otherwise healthy and enjoys his daily walks and good food. During a health screening, he was found to be hyperlipidaemic (LDL 3.4 mmol/L; HDL 1.0 mmol/L). He was started on simvastatin 20 mg nocte by his physician. He...
Commentary
Prehabilitation and Its Role in Geriatric Surgery
The population in Singapore is ageing rapidly. According to statistics, by 2030, 1 in 2 adults in Singapore will be >65 years old. As the life expectancy of the population has improved significantly in the past few decades, a substantial portion of this rapidly ageing population will place a...
Letter to the Editor
Congenital adhesion band causing recurrent subacute intestinal obstruction in a virgin abdomen
Intestinal obstruction (IO) caused by malignancy and adhesion bands from previous surgery is common among adults. However, IO caused by congenital adhesion bands (CAB) in the elderly is rare. We report a case of a 63-year-old man who presented with acute-on-chronic intestinal obstruction due to CAB, which caused pseudointestinal...
Editorial
Tackling osteoporosis and fragility fractures in Singapore
A shift in worldwide population ageing demographics has occurred in the 21st century. The longevity miracle is most keenly felt in Singapore, a young nation which gained its independence only in 1965, but has one of the fastest growing ageing populations in the world. It is estimated that by...