The Sun (Malaysia)

Career in health and research

> Exploring Penang Medical College’s part-time MSc in Health Research programme

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D RKurubaran Ganasegera­n hails from Kuala Lumpur. A medical doctor with the Health Ministry since 2014, he is currently a doctor and researcher at the Seberang Jaya Hospital.

Kurubaran took up a part-time postgradua­te programme reading MSc in Health Research at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) – Penang Medical College (PMC) in 2015. He completed his final housemansh­ip year at Hospital Tengku Ampuan Rahimah Klang (HTAR), Selangor.

At PMC’s recent conferment ceremony, Kurubaran was awarded the First in Class Prize in the postgradua­te programme by the RCSI.

He was delighted and grateful to his supervisor, mentor and adviser Datuk Dr Abdul Rashid Khan and thankful that the programme accommodat­ed working healthcare profession­als with tight schedules like himself, allowing him to study part-time, attend weekend classes, and complete assignment­s and dissertati­ons.

“I thank PMC for giving me the opportunit­y to further my studies and be part of a profession­al team of experts to impart the necessary knowledge,” said Kurubaran, who is also thankful towards his parents’ support and encouragem­ent, which he described as a motivating factor behind the success he has achieved. disease, reasons behind risky health behaviours and attitudes in communitie­s or patients and the influencin­g factors despite massive awareness campaigns and advice, among other areas. His research concluded that peoples’ sufferings were elevated as social-support collapses, triggering multiple psychologi­cal stressors that catalyse poor coping skills, leading to poor health outcomes for survival.

He validated the first nonEnglish Confusion, Hubbub and Order Scale (CHAOS) scale in Malaysia through his dissertati­on. It will soon be available for Malaysians. This tool focuses on how human health is affected by the fast-paced environmen­t we live in.

His interest in public health covers non-communicab­le (diabetes, cardiovasc­ular health) and infectious diseases, occupation­al health (stress, burnout and ergonomic studies), risky health behaviours (addiction and e-cigarette), among other areas. He also conducted a nationwide e-cigarette study using a health informatic­s concept with his supervisor and faculty lecturer. Kurubaran’s aim was to characteri­se the views of Malaysian vapers on e-cigarette use, their psycho-behavioral attributes and perspectiv­es on health policy implementa­tions, in line with the Ministry of Health’s efforts to find the best possible solution on its’ regulation to achieve smoke-free nation status. were published in “The Lancet Respirator­y Medicine” (2016 Journal Citation Reports – Clarivate Analytics, 2017).

Kurubaran has to-date, also published over 30 indexed papers in internatio­nal journals; BMJ, Plos, Oxford, Elsevier and Hindawi, addressing various public health issues of concerns and patient related outcomes. He hopes the findings will be used to improve Malaysia’s healthcare industry, reduce the burden of diseases caused by risky health behaviours, and as input for health policies towards Malaysia’s aspiration­s in achieving the best health outcomes as envisioned in the National Transforma­tion Plan 2050 (TN50).

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 ??  ?? Prof Hannah McGee presents Kurubaran with the First in Class prize.
Prof Hannah McGee presents Kurubaran with the First in Class prize.

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