Kia Fatt Quek
Monash University
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Featured researches published by Kia Fatt Quek.
International Journal of Medical Informatics | 2011
Amutha Ramadas; Kia Fatt Quek; Carina Chan; Brian Oldenburg
INTRODUCTION The Internet has emerged as a potentially effective medium for information exchange. The Internets potential has been recognised and web-based education programmes have been steadily adopted in recent years in preventing and managing chronic diseases such as diabetes mellitus. This review provides a descriptive discussion of web-based behavioural interventions for the management of type 2 diabetes mellitus. METHOD Systematic literature searches were performed using MEDLINE, EMBASE, PUBMED, PsycINFO, Web of Science and Cochrane Library to retrieve articles published between 2000 and June 2010 which fulfilled all inclusion criteria. Methodological quality assessment and data synthesis were then performed. RESULTS Twenty articles representing 13 different studies were reviewed. None of the studies were ranked as low in the methodological quality. Goal-setting, personalised coaching, interactive feedback and online peer support groups were some of the successful approaches which were applied in e-interventions to manage type 2 diabetes mellitus. Strong theoretical background, use of other technologies and longer duration of intervention were proven to be successful strategies as well. CONCLUSION The web-based interventions have demonstrated some level of favourable outcomes, provided they are further enhanced with proper e-research strategies.
Journal of Cancer Survivorship | 2013
Siew Yim Loh; Tanya Packer; Karuthan Chinna; Kia Fatt Quek
PurposePatient self-management enables living with a chronic disease effectively. This study examines the effectiveness of a 4-week self-management programme to enable self-management of the numerous after-effects and with breast cancer as a chronic disease.MethodsUpon ethical approval, 147 multiethnic survivors (stages I–III breast cancer) received either a 4-week self-management intervention (n = 68) or usual care (n = 78) on a controlled clinical trial in a medical centre. The facilitator-led group intervention provides self-management support and skills for managing the medical, emotional and role tasks. Survivors completed the pre- and post-intervention measures on quality of life, distress and participation inventory.ResultsMultiple analyses of covariance (adjusted for baseline measures) showed significant differences between groups [F(6, 129) = 2.26, p = 0.04 at post-test and F(6, 129) = 4.090, p < 0.001 at follow-up]. Post hoc analysis indicated significantly better outcome on all measures. At follow-up, the experimental group had a mean quality of life (QOL) score of 3.39 [CI = 1.37–5.42; p = 0.001] greater than the control.ConclusionsThere is preliminary evidence that the 4-week self-management intervention enhance the QOL of women with breast cancer, by enabling them to better self-manage the numerous medical, emotional and role tasks. Further randomised trials are warranted.Implication for Cancer SurvivorsSurvivors receiving self-management programme report improved HRQL compared with those on usual care. Although time can attenuate the participation limitation and distress of survivors, self-management programmes could help to increase patients’ self-efficacy for better self-management.
Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 2011
B. Ahmad; B.A.K. Khalid; A. Zaini; N.A. Hussain; Kia Fatt Quek
The objective of this study was to elucidate influencing factors of HbA1C in various health care settings. The glycaemic control was suboptimal in all settings. Multivariate analysis confirmed three factors were significant in HbA1C outcome; insulin (p=0.000), medication (p=0.043) and ethnicity (p=0.000).
International Journal of Applied and Basic Medical Research | 2011
Siew Yim Loh; Kia Fatt Quek
Objective: The Cancer Behavior Inventory (CBI), a measure of self-efficacy for coping with cancer, was used to examine the feasibility and impact of a self-management program for women with breast cancer. This controlled clinical trial was conducted on newly diagnosed breast cancer patients, using a time series, block design. Sixty-nine patients were allocated to receive four weekly sessions of the self-management training program, while 78 patients were allocated to the control (usual-care) group. Results: A significant difference was found between the means of the experimental and the control group at post-test (T2; P=.01) and at follow-up (T3; P=.02). The multivariate analyses of the three repeated measures showed significant differences (P=.001; partial eta-squared = 0.092). Pair-wise comparison shows that the differences were significant between baseline (T1) measure and follow-up (T3) measure (P=.01), and between post-test (T2) and follow-up (T3) (P=.03). Conclusion: For women undergoing intervention, the cancer-specific self-efficacy as measured by the cancer-behavior-coping inventory showed improvement over time. The result demonstrated that the self-management program to improve self-care correlates significantly with coping behavior in cancer. A larger and longer study of this efficacy-enhancing intervention is warranted.
Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2012
Siew Yim Loh; Shing Yee Lee; Kia Fatt Quek; Liam Murray
BACKGROUND Clinical trials on cancer subjects have one of the highest dropout rates. Barriers to recruitment range from patient-related, through institutional-related to staff-related factors. This paper highlights the low response rate and the recruitment barriers faced in our Qigong exercises trial. MATERIALS AND METHOD The Qigong trial is a three-arm trial with a priori power size of 114 patients for 80% power. The University Malaya Medical Centre database showed a total of 1,933 patients from 2006-2010 and 751 patients met our inclusion criteria. These patients were approached via telephone interview. 131 out of 197 patients attended the trial and the final response rate was 48% (n=95/197). RESULTS Multiple barriers were identified, and were regrouped as patient- related, clinician-related and/or institutional related. A major consistent barrier was logistic difficulty related to transportation and car parking at the Medical Centre. conclusions: All clinical trials must pay considerable attention to the recruitment process and it should even be piloted to identify potential barriers and facilitators to reduce attrition rate in trials.
BMC Public Health | 2011
Amutha Ramadas; Kia Fatt Quek; Carina Ky Chan; Brian Oldenburg; Zanariah Hussein
Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2010
Siew Yim Loh; Cheng Har Yip; Tanya Packer; Kia Fatt Quek
Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2011
Siew Yim Loh; Shin-Lin Chew; Shing-Yee Lee; Kia Fatt Quek
Open Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2014
Hardip Kaur Dhillon; Md. Zain Anuar Zaini; Kia Fatt Quek; Harbindar Jeet Singh; Gurpreet Kaur; Bin Nordin Rusli
Health | 2013
Siew Yim Loh; Sl Chew; Kia Fatt Quek