Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Salam dari Malaysia....
Adoyai..lame btul x update blog..hahaha..sori to all yg tunggu latest entry aku..aku tgh happy ni..byk sbb utk happy...1st skali mstila sbb aku kt rmh..meninggal bumi India yg mencabar tu..2ndly Alhamdulillah aku dh dpt result utk 1st MBBS..dptla aku holiday dgn sepenuh hati..
ni baru dinamakan cuti..klu x hati asyik pikir psl result je...
Klu ikut byk benda nk cite..tp satu2 la kn..
Semoga bertemu lagi..
Senyum selalu dari saya Nur Shuhaiza
Hehehe...
Friday, May 8, 2009
Fikirkan boleh!!!!!
Dh lama x merapu..xsempat...ari ni x start study lg lps abih prac biochem smlm...isnin ade paper..then 10 ari lps tu start final exam...how should i manage my time???...hope everything will be fine...sblum tawakkal kena usaha dulu..so, Shuhaiza!!!!..dont waste ur time anymore...
ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..
ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..
ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..
ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..
ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..ANATOMY..PHYSIOLOGY..BIOCHEMISTRY..
Three subject je Shu...u can do it...Kalau org len bleh buat kau pun bleh buat..Never Give up!!!!
Allah sentiasa bersama org yg berusaha..
Friday, May 1, 2009
Doktor tak tahan beban kerja dinasihat berhenti
Pegawai perubatan perlu tunai kerja lebih masa dengan berkesan
KUALA LUMPUR: Doktor yang merungut atau tidak tahan dengan bebanan kerja tambahan berikutan kekurangan doktor di hospital kerajaan ketika ini, dinasihatkan supaya berhenti kerja.
Presiden Majlis Perubatan Malaysia (MMC), Tan Sri Dr Mohd Ismail Merican, berkata setiap doktor perlu melaksanakan tugas dengan berkesan walaupun terpaksa bekerja lebih masa kerana menjadi tanggungjawab mereka memberi perkhidmatan terbaik kepada masyarakat.
"Walaupun mereka bekerja lebih masa, kita tetap memperuntukkan waktu rehat sama ada sebelah petang mahupun pagi dan ia perlu dimanfaatkan sebaik mungkin," katanya kepada Berita Harian, semalam.
Dr Mohd Ismail yang juga ketua Pengarah Kesihatan mengakui kekurangan doktor di hospital kerajaan kini menjadi punca perkhidmatan ditawarkan di hospital kerajaan kurang disenangi orang ramai terutama pesakit.
Namun, katanya, ia bukan alasan untuk pengamal perubatan terbabit memberi perkhidmatan kurang memuaskan.
"Kita sedar kerajaan hanya mampu menyediakan 53 peratus saja bilangan doktor berbanding keperluan semasa. Oleh itu, sememangnya doktor yang ada sekarang terpaksa bekerja lebih masa dan saya berharap mereka dapat melaksanakannya dengan penuh tanggungjawab," katanya.
Baru-baru ini, akhbar melaporkan dua doktor di jabatan kecemasan Hospital Kuala Lumpur (HKL) ditangkap `curi tulang' dengan membaca akhbar dan melakukan kerja peribadi oleh Timbalan Menteri Wilayah Persekutuan, Datuk M Saravanan, ketika lebih 20 pesakit menunggu untuk mendapatkan rawatan..
Berikutan itu, pelbagai pihak termasuk pesakit tampil menyatakan rasa kesal dengan perkhidmatan diberikan ekoran terpaksa menunggu terlalu lama sehingga ada yang melebihi dua jam untuk mendapatkan rawatan di Jabatan Kecemasan hospital kerajaan.
Ekoran itu juga segelintir doktor tampil memperbetulkan keadaan dengan meluahkan perasaan akan kepenatan mereka kerana terpaksa bekerja lebih masa dan merawat sekurang-kurang 30 pesakit sehari ekoran kekurangan doktor.
Dr Mohd Ismail berkata, kerajaan berusaha menangani masalah itu dengan menambah bilangan doktor, termasuk secara kontrak dan melonggarkan beberapa syarat pengambilan.
Katanya, kerajaan bukan saja berusaha menambah bilangan doktor, malah kakitangan perubatan lain, termasuk jururawat.
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
An Invisible Thread....
We are all connected. Joined together by an invisible thread, infinite in its potential and fragile in its design. Yet while connected, we are also merely individuals. Empty vessels to be filled with infinite possibilities. An assortment of thoughts, beliefs. A collection of disjointed memories and experiences. Can I be me without this? Can you be you? And if this invisible thread that holds us together were to sever, to cease, what then? What would become of billions of lone, disconnected souls? Therein lies the great quest of our lives. To find. To connect. To hold on. For when our hearts are pure, and our thoughts in line, we are all truly one. Capable of repairing our fragile world, and creating a universe of infinite possibilities.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
World badminton facing dearth of talented singles players
Let share some facts.....
The badminton powerhouses, including Malaysia, are currently witnessing a dearth of talented men’s singles shuttlers.The sport badly needs saviours to breathe life and inject excitement back into the men’s singles event once again.
In Malaysia, there is no one else except for world No. 1 Lee Chong Wei to carry the torch.
It’s the same elsewhere too.
In fact, do not be surprised if the battle for supremacy at the 2012 London Olympic Games boils down to the same old protagonists – Chong Wei, China’s Lin Dan, Denmark’s Peter-Gade Christensen and Indonesia’s Taufik Hidayat!
That is the sorry state of world badminton.
Except for China, probably, the world is starved of new talents in men’s singles.
Indonesia are hoping to unearth more Taufiks; Denmark are scouring the land for another Christensen; and South Korea’s only hope for now is Park Sung-hwan.
China currently have several juniors waiting in the wings but they are not expected to soar as high as their former greats – like Yang Yang, Zhao Jianhua and Han Jian.
In Malaysia, Chong Wei’s almost total domination of the local scene for seven years speaks volumes of the dearth of talent at home.
If only we had three Chong Weis, Malaysia can surely look forward to winning the Thomas Cup Finals for the first time in 17 years on home turf next year.
But the gap between the back-up shuttlers and Chong Wei is so wide that surely something must be wrong with BAM’s coaching and training set-up.
They have good coaches and fantastic facilities; they adopt the Sports Science approach in training; the shuttlers are offered lucrative incentive packages; and there is the three-tier national training structure — elite, back-up elite and Bukit Jalil Sports School (BJSS).
The second echelon of players — Liew Daren, Mohd Arif Abdul Latif, Chong Wei Feng and Tan Chun Seang — cannot be faulted for not trying their best. It is just that their best is simply not good enough.
Singles chief coach Rashid Sidek is at his wits’ end trying to figure out ways to help these players make the breakthrough.
What is wrong then?
In China, a 10-year-old child goes into full-time training.
In Malaysia, full-time training only begins after Form Five.
In China, the juniors spar with the cream of the crop daily.
In Malaysia, this takes place only three times a week.
In China, all the provinces are involved in nurturing talents.
In Malaysia, only Selangor, Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Kedah, Johor and Sabah are active.
BAM president Datuk Nadzmi Mohd Salleh admitted they were facing a serious problem due to the lack of depth in the men’s singles department, saying: “We have to do something different. There has to be some drastic changes.
“Our juniors are improving in small steps but we want to see them making progress by leaps and bounds.
“We are seriously looking into this.”
The BA of Malaysia only have to take a few steps back to find the solution.
They need to go back to the basics and that is to focus on schools and grassroots programmes and kick the “sleeping” states into action.
The World Badminton Federation (BWF) too have a big role to play to get all their affiliates on the right track again because, for the last few years, there has been too much distraction with the power struggles within the set-up.
And, hopefully, the focus will be on how to raise up new stars rather than trying to ‘kill’ each other in the quest for power and control.