Thursday August 23, 2007
Improper healthcare screening may give wrong impression
PETALING JAYA: A proper healthcare screening must be related to a particular concern over a person's health condition or it could lead to high costs and unnecessary “panic” or “a false sense of confidence.”
“The first step is to simply not screen for no reason at all because it has very little medical basis,” Academy of Medicine College of Pathologists president Prof Dr Looi Lai Meng said.
She said this when asked to comment on Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek’s statement that health screening by untrained individuals or at hotels or shopping centres was illegal.
She said that indiscriminate screening, unrelated to a health condition, could cause the individual to panic and end up with a “huge medical bill” if the results were not good.
Alternatively, if the results were good the person could have a false sense of confidence.
She added that a person should first visit his doctor who must determine which test was relevant for him.
Dr Looi also urged people not to take the risk of illegal testing that might done by untrained people or those using questionable methods.
She said the role of pathology labs was important because health-screening tests required the use of proper techniques and the expertise of trained pathologists.
Earlier Story:
Chua: Health screening at shopping centres illegal
News Poll
- Court ruling takes bite out of local council summonses
- Chin Peng apologises for death of innocents
- Girl and stepmum held over bid to kill first wife
- Biggest karaoke session a blast
- New evidence on MCA snoop squad case arrives at doorstep
- Teoh’s body exhumed for second autopsy today
- Victim’s dad nabs kidnapper
- Foreigner falls to her death from condominium
- Puad faces flak over ‘use Bahasa only’ remark
- Big impact in ‘small’ man’s win
- Court ruling takes bite out of local council summonses
- Chin Peng apologises for death of innocents
- Malaysians must get regular dental checks
- Big impact in ‘small’ man’s win
- No licence to try offenders
- Weapons drawn for new battle
- Johor set to be a medical hub
- Joy for 2,500 housebuyers as SPNB takes over project
- Draw valuable, life-saving lessons from tragedies
- RM849mil owed by various state agencies


