Drug Utilization Pattern During Flood Season In The State Of Kelantan, Malaysia: Perceptions, Experiences And Challenges In Military Field Hospitals

Every medical mission faces a dilemma on which type of drugs to be brought adequately to cover the whole operation throughout the mission. There are uncertain-ties about the duration of mission, type of drugs to be brought, and difficulties in communication and land transport in the disaster area. P...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yaacob, Mohammad Firdaus
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.usm.my/52054/
http://eprints.usm.my/52054/1/MOHAMMAD%20FIRDAUS%20BIN%20YAACOB.pdf
_version_ 1848882154337992704
author Yaacob, Mohammad Firdaus
author_facet Yaacob, Mohammad Firdaus
author_sort Yaacob, Mohammad Firdaus
building USM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Every medical mission faces a dilemma on which type of drugs to be brought adequately to cover the whole operation throughout the mission. There are uncertain-ties about the duration of mission, type of drugs to be brought, and difficulties in communication and land transport in the disaster area. Pharmacists will be able to plan which medical stock to bring if they can acquire relevant data regarding the pat-tern of drug utilization from previous missions. The deployment of a military field hospital for the purpose of responding to natural disaster, man-made conflicts, and peacekeeping mission, as well as conventional battlefield, brings grief challenges to healthcare providers. They face many uncertainties in different environments and situations, including the exposure to personal and health threats. This current re-search was conducted in two phases (mixed method: explanatory design). The first phase was a quantitative study, which was a retrospective and descriptive examina-tion of the drug utilisation pattern during the flood season of 2014 at a military field hospital which was deployed at Manek Urai, Kelantan. This study aimed to estimate the drug utilisation pattern during a specific flood season at a military field hospital in the state of Kelantan. The researcher analysed 2771 prescriptions with an average of 103 prescriptions per day. Most of the patients displayed diseases related to the respiratory system (44.9%); skin problem (15.1%); and the digestive system (11.6%).
first_indexed 2025-11-15T18:30:24Z
format Thesis
id usm-52054
institution Universiti Sains Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-15T18:30:24Z
publishDate 2021
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling usm-520542022-03-28T07:00:58Z http://eprints.usm.my/52054/ Drug Utilization Pattern During Flood Season In The State Of Kelantan, Malaysia: Perceptions, Experiences And Challenges In Military Field Hospitals Yaacob, Mohammad Firdaus R Medicine RM300-666 Drugs and their actions Every medical mission faces a dilemma on which type of drugs to be brought adequately to cover the whole operation throughout the mission. There are uncertain-ties about the duration of mission, type of drugs to be brought, and difficulties in communication and land transport in the disaster area. Pharmacists will be able to plan which medical stock to bring if they can acquire relevant data regarding the pat-tern of drug utilization from previous missions. The deployment of a military field hospital for the purpose of responding to natural disaster, man-made conflicts, and peacekeeping mission, as well as conventional battlefield, brings grief challenges to healthcare providers. They face many uncertainties in different environments and situations, including the exposure to personal and health threats. This current re-search was conducted in two phases (mixed method: explanatory design). The first phase was a quantitative study, which was a retrospective and descriptive examina-tion of the drug utilisation pattern during the flood season of 2014 at a military field hospital which was deployed at Manek Urai, Kelantan. This study aimed to estimate the drug utilisation pattern during a specific flood season at a military field hospital in the state of Kelantan. The researcher analysed 2771 prescriptions with an average of 103 prescriptions per day. Most of the patients displayed diseases related to the respiratory system (44.9%); skin problem (15.1%); and the digestive system (11.6%). 2021-04 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.usm.my/52054/1/MOHAMMAD%20FIRDAUS%20BIN%20YAACOB.pdf Yaacob, Mohammad Firdaus (2021) Drug Utilization Pattern During Flood Season In The State Of Kelantan, Malaysia: Perceptions, Experiences And Challenges In Military Field Hospitals. Masters thesis, Perpustakaan Hamzah Sendut.
spellingShingle R Medicine
RM300-666 Drugs and their actions
Yaacob, Mohammad Firdaus
Drug Utilization Pattern During Flood Season In The State Of Kelantan, Malaysia: Perceptions, Experiences And Challenges In Military Field Hospitals
title Drug Utilization Pattern During Flood Season In The State Of Kelantan, Malaysia: Perceptions, Experiences And Challenges In Military Field Hospitals
title_full Drug Utilization Pattern During Flood Season In The State Of Kelantan, Malaysia: Perceptions, Experiences And Challenges In Military Field Hospitals
title_fullStr Drug Utilization Pattern During Flood Season In The State Of Kelantan, Malaysia: Perceptions, Experiences And Challenges In Military Field Hospitals
title_full_unstemmed Drug Utilization Pattern During Flood Season In The State Of Kelantan, Malaysia: Perceptions, Experiences And Challenges In Military Field Hospitals
title_short Drug Utilization Pattern During Flood Season In The State Of Kelantan, Malaysia: Perceptions, Experiences And Challenges In Military Field Hospitals
title_sort drug utilization pattern during flood season in the state of kelantan, malaysia: perceptions, experiences and challenges in military field hospitals
topic R Medicine
RM300-666 Drugs and their actions
url http://eprints.usm.my/52054/
http://eprints.usm.my/52054/1/MOHAMMAD%20FIRDAUS%20BIN%20YAACOB.pdf