Combining women's and children's healthcare is also beneficial from a medical standpoint as well as a social one. Delivery of crossover services becomes quicker, easier and more efficient within a single site. Many times at KK Women's and Children's Hospital (KKH) we have witnessed a neonatologist supervise the birth of a child before handing over to the pediatric urologist or cardiac surgeon, thereby allowing treatment to continue promptly without interruption or the need for further travel, with the associated delays and costs that this entails.
KKH treats a more specific section of the community than a general hospital, and this has proved to be beneficial from a practical point of view as well. With the field of potential patients narrowed we can reduce the range of equipment that we need, keep a more specific selection of drugs at the pharmacy, and standardize the hospital wards to a greater degree. We can also provide more specialized training for physicians, who can gain hands-on experience of a wide spectrum of conditions within their discipline.
Specializing in this way also has benefits for research, enabling a greater focus, which in turn improves the ease of execution. Consequently KKH as participated in several large-scale international trials, including those of the rotavirus and cervical cancer vaccines. Entry into trials such as these can be competitive, but the ability to accrue large numbers of subjects quickly and easily has enabled our hospital to participate in these trials in major way. Furthermore we can provide a different patient perspective to centers in Europe and the US, and for these particular studies KKH was the main provider of Asian subjects.
Until 1997, pediatric hospital care in Singapore was spread between Tan Tock Seng (TTSH), Singapore General (SGH) and National University Hospitals. The visionary decision to consolidate the former two (TTSH & SGH) services into KKH - previously a dedicated women's hospital - has enabled the hospital to expand into new areas and provide further dimensions of care to its patients. Examples include the development of highly specialized breast surgery and plastic and reconstructive surgery teams, and the opening of the Women Wellness Centre and Department of Child Development. Promoting mental health within the same vicinity as physical health also has the added benefit of reducing the stigma that can be associated with conventional psychiatric settings.
In a large specialist center such as KKH the progression to higher-level services is a natural one, and it would not be surprising to see the private sector develop along these lines in future. High-end secondary and tertiary care such as this can only be feasible when there is access to a high volume of primary care patients, however, otherwise the demand will not match the capacity for supply and an expensive excess will develop.
In Singapore, patients from all corners of the country can reach the hospital within 30 minutes, making the concentration of care into specialist center very feasible. By virtue of its size and position within a dense population, KKH delivers a third of the 38,000-odd babies born each year in Singapore and provides care for around 70 percent of the country's children. This model of centralized combined healthcare might not be feasible in all countries, however, and smaller hospitals in more sparsely-populated areas may not be able to match the volume of patients needed to sustain a dedicated center.
By focusing and centralizing our services we have been able to enhance our international reputation and provide regional leadership, and over the years we have attracted many foreign doctors on training fellowships. Other countries have begun looking into our model of hospital structure, and there has been a lot of interest from China in particular. For now women's and children's hospitals remain a rarity within Asia but, as KK demonstrates, this system can provide many important benefits to both doctors and patients at all levels of care.
Published by Firmansyah
Special Victims Unit's Season Finale was 'Ludacris'Are we to believe that this baton was passed from Bill Cosby to Tyler Perry and that we cannot imagine the humanity and decency of a black man as a good father?
A Mother Daughter Interview for Mother's DayIt is hard to be the perfect mother and every mother makes mistakes along the way. If you are a new Mom, take it from us: there will be some bumps along the parenting road, bu...- The Destructor - The Role of the Feminine Computerized Voice in Society and CinemaA critical study of the female computerized voice in science fiction films.
- They Say Jesus was a Carpenter (For My Mother)Memories of my mother, and a poem written shortly before her death.
- The Right of Privacy and the Status of Deviant Sex Laws Post-LawrenceAn analysis of state sodomy laws and other sex-based regulations in the wake of the Supreme Court's landmark decision in Lawrence v. Texas.
- Sexual Repression in Metamorphosis and The Turn of the Screw
- Analysis of "One Child" by Torey Hayden
- Protection and Consideration in Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Wives of the Dead
- Fear, Sex, and Identity in Herman Melville's Typee
- How My Father's Illness and Death Changed My Life
- Five Breastfeeding Tips for the New Mother
- My Mother, My Friend



