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Medical officers to receive BIPPW payment during SWE

Medical officers to receive BIPPW payment during SWE

The Sun14-07-2025
PUTRAJAYA: The government has approved the Pre-Gazette Specialist Incentive Payment (BIPPW) for medical officers undergoing Supervised Work Experience (SWE) after specialist training.
This move ensures financial recognition during their probationary period.
SWE is a mandatory phase where medical officers refine their skills under senior supervision before full specialist recognition.
The Ministry of Health (MOH) stated that BIPPW aligns with the Medical (Amendment) Act 2024, effective since July 1.
'The BIPPW payment begins once SWE starts. Previously, officers only received the Specialist Incentive Payment (BIP) after gazettement,' MOH explained.
The payment rate matches BIP, based on the officer's grade (Grades 10 to 14).
This incentive acknowledges the workload and responsibilities of medical officers during SWE, where they perform specialist-level duties. It also enhances personnel welfare and service quality.
Act A1729 now regulates all local specialist training programmes.
Medical practitioners in cardiothoracic surgery, family medicine, plastic surgery, and generic pathology can now seek registration as promised earlier this year.
MOH reassures officers that SWE participants will receive entitled allowances without delays.
The ministry remains committed to strengthening healthcare and encourages continuous contributions to public well-being. - Bernama
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Menopause Treatment Can Help Women Stay In The Workforce
Menopause Treatment Can Help Women Stay In The Workforce

Barnama

timean hour ago

  • Barnama

Menopause Treatment Can Help Women Stay In The Workforce

L im Ai Jing feels like she has been a bad daughter. When her 54-year-old mother called her to complain that she was not sleeping well, Lim dismissed her concerns, thinking they were normal gripes. 'And initially, I took it lightly. But then now, when I read through everything, it's like, oh my god, this can be quite serious,' Lim, 29, told Bernama via Zoom. The 'everything' she was referring to is her research on perimenopause, the transition phase when estrogen levels in women start declining, and menopause, characterised by the end of the menstrual cycle for good, and their long-term effects on women's health. Long considered a natural process that did not require any intervention, experts are now calling for a paradigm shift: recognising early menopause care not just as a matter of individual well-being but as a crucial strategy to prevent non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and save Malaysia and its people significant money and misery. 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In the foreword of the Ministry of Health (MOH) Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Menopause, then-Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin, wrote this: 'Menopause, a natural biological process that is accompanied by estrogen deficiency, will affect every woman. As the average age of menopause in Malaysia is around 50 years, one-third of the lives of women are going to be without the hormone estrogen, making them susceptible to a multitude of problems, ranging from social to medical issues such as coronary heart disease, non-communicable diseases, osteoporosis and cancers.' Dr Ho said providing early menopause care, such as Menopausal Hormone Therapy (MHT), for women with moderate to severe symptoms is a worthwhile investment as it will prevent many diseases and complications later on. 'Menopausal Hormone Therapy has long-term benefits. We are talking about preventing diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, heart disease, osteoporosis and fractures,' she said. 'When you treat all these women who are having symptoms now, it is cardiac protective. It actually protects the heart, you know.' According to the 2013-2019 National Diabetes Registry, published by MOH, women constitute the majority of diabetic cases in Malaysia at 57.1 percent. The report did not specify at what age the women were diagnosed with diabetes, whether they were receiving MHT or whether they outnumbered men due to their longer life expectancy. Studies on hip fractures among elderly patients admitted to teaching hospitals in Malaysia found that most of the patients were women due to their lower bone density from osteoporosis. The average stay at the hospital was five days. 'Give, like, free menopause hormone therapy in the government clinic. Okay, that will cut down (the government's) health expenses 10 to 20 years down the road,' Dr Ho added. 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Lim, who works as a clinical psychologist at Sunway Medical Centre Velocity, said many of the symptoms can be debilitating, regardless of whether the women are working or not. 'The most destructive symptom (is) sleep disturbance, and also the most important one that we cannot ignore is the cognitive problem, that is, concentration issues (or brain fog),' she said. Brain fog can make it difficult to concentrate, remember crucial information or make quick decisions, impacting productivity in roles that require sharp cognitive function. Hot flashes, another menopausal symptom, can lead to embarrassment and discomfort in professional settings, while chronic fatigue from sleep disturbances erodes overall well-being and focus. These symptoms have a carry-over effect. 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Studies have cited factors such as cultural stigma and taboo, and misinformation and fear. Dr Nik Hazlina said the ignorance is often generational and women, especially those in rural areas, tend to see menopause as a natural part of ageing and something to be endured. 'Although menopause is a natural physiological process, it can produce debilitating symptoms,' she said. This ignorance is not only rife among the public but also among the medical and healthcare sector, even in gynaecology. One woman, who asked to be identified as Nadirah, told Bernama that an oncologist acquaintance warned her to only take her hormonal replacement therapy (HRT) for five years for fear of developing breast cancer. Dr Ho was not surprised to hear Nadirah's story, saying that she has seen patients who had been put on MHT by one doctor, only to be taken off it by another. 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Dr Nisha's batik scrubs brighten up hospital wards
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Dr Nisha's batik scrubs brighten up hospital wards

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Dzulkefly: 13MP health budget hike to RM40b aims to tackle ageing, disease burden
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Malay Mail

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Dzulkefly: 13MP health budget hike to RM40b aims to tackle ageing, disease burden

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