Category: Sosial

  • Managing The Wait At Polyclinics

    Managing The Wait At Polyclinics

    Three years ago, Mdm Helen Chua, 69, would set aside half a day for her thrice-monthly thyroid check-up at Clementi Polyclinic. But for the past year, the full-time housewife only had to spend less than two hours for each visit, even though the procedure — blood test, then consultation with the doctor — remains the same.

    Mdm Chua’s experience is indicative of the results from the Customer Satisfaction Index of Singapore (CSISG) released for the fourth quarter of 2014 by the Institute of Service Excellence at the Singapore Management University (ISES).

    Within the healthcare sector, the polyclinics sub-sector made the most substantial leap with a 4.6-per-cent year-on-year improvement and scored 68.9 points out of 100.

    Specialised healthcare was another sub-sector that performed well. It demonstrated an improvement of 2.8 per cent from the year before with a score of 72.2 points.

    The restructured hospitals sub-sector had a less significant improvement of 0.5 per cent with a score of 69.3 points.

    On the whole, the healthcare sector scored 71 points, a 1.6-per-cent year-on-year increase. Together with the finance and insurance sector, the two sectors contributed to the overall national satisfaction index of 71.1 points, a rise of 0.6 per cent from 2013.

    This also marked the fourth consecutive year the national satisfaction index has risen.

    IMPROVEd WAITING TIME

    In the survey, the touchpoint that awarded the polyclinics sub-sector the most notable improvement was the waiting time. Scoring 6.4 out of 10 on the satisfaction scale, it did better than 2013’s score of 5.6.

    Other touchpoints that showed significant improvements include registration efficiency, seat availability and ease of moving around. Registration efficiency, for instance, was awarded 7.4, an improvement from 2013’s score of 6.8.

    The ease of moving around touchpoint received 7.4, a climb from the previous year’s 6.8.

    Ms Suzana Md Salleh can vouch for the improvement. “When I accompanied my mother to Jurong Polyclinic for her first high blood pressure check-up in 2012, it was chaotic. We didn’t know where to start. I remember waiting three to four hours before we saw the doctor,” said the receptionist in her late 30s. “Then, we waited more than 30 minutes to collect my mother’s medication and another half hour or so to pay.”

    Things were vastly different on her 62-year-old mother’s last visit at the same polyclinic in the middle of 2014. “I couldn’t go with her, so when she rang me, I thought she had lost her way. It turned out she had already finished her appointment, all within two hours,” said Ms Suzana.

    MOVING, RATHER THAN REMOVING, the BOTTLENECK

    A key point that the CSISG survey uncovered was that patients’ satisfaction with the medication collection and payment processes has declined.The satisfaction score for the waiting time for these two processes was 5.7 for medication collection and 5.9 for payment process.

    Assistant Professor of Marketing (Practice) and academic director of ISES Marcus Lee said that the phenomenon suggested “the bottleneck was moved, rather than removed”.

    Said Dr Lee: “In redesigning an optimal service experience, it is often useful to introduce improvements at the tail end of your customer’s journey, and then work towards the start.

    “Doing so would allow the later parts of your process flow to better handle any increases in throughput due to improvements in the earlier parts of the customer journey.”

    Mr James How Pow Aik, assistant director of clinic operations at SingHealth Polyclinics, attributed the bottleneck to the growing ageing population and an increase in chronic diseases.

    According to him, 30 per cent of the patients at SingHealth Polyclinics are 65 years old and above. With the “increase in the prevalence of chronic diseases, the medication dispensing volume has also increased”, he said.

    Initiatives such as the Pioneer Generation subsidies also contributed to the backlog. “The staff has to manage an increase in patient queries on the applicable subsidies and how they impact their bill size,” said Mr How.

    “While there are designated counters to assist patients with billing queries, our staff continues to attend to simple queries before processing payment.”

    To reduce the need to queue at the counters at SingHealth polyclinics, self-service kiosks are available for registering, and making payment and appointments, said Mr How.

    While waiting to consult the doctors, patients can also make use of the time to have their height, weight and blood pressure taken by trained staff at health monitoring stations.

    Over at the two SingHealth-managed hospitals, Singapore General Hospital (SGH) and KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital (KKH), the waiting time to collect medicine was less than 30 minutes in 2014, said Ms Isabel Yong, SingHealth’s director of group service quality.

    One of the main contributing factors to the waiting time is that the pharmacists need time to ensure the patients understand the medication and dosage, especially for the elderly and those on multiple medication, said Ms Yong.

    To address the waiting issue at the end of the customer journey, SGH and KKH have implemented several services, such as the Express Repeat Service. It issues a separate queue number for regular, repeat patients who don’t require the pharmacist’s counselling. “Patients are also given a phone number to call if they have any queries on their medication,” said Ms Yong.

    Another time-saving initiative from SingHealth is the delivery of regular, repeat medication to the patient’s home for a nominal fee. At SGH, eligible patients can also pay a small fee to have medication sent to their nearest Unity or Watsons outlet for a more convenient collection.

    To shorten the queue for making payment, the National Healthcare Group Polyclinics (NHGP), which runs nine polyclinics, has implemented self-payment kiosks that accept NETS, NETS Flashpay, NETS Cash Card and EZ-Link.

    “We plan to introduce more user-friendly interfaces that also allow payment via cash and credit cards,” said Mr Ang Chee Chiang, director of clinic operations at NHGP.

    “We also encourage both chronic and acute patients to make an appointment before they come to the clinic to minimise unnecessary waiting time.”

    SUSTAINING CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

    To achieve customer satisfaction in a sustainable manner, Dr Lee said that the key is to enable “customers to effectively make informed choices to self-select when, where, and how they choose to interact with companies”.

    According to Dr Lee, waiting time in itself is generally not the real issue. “The real issue is an unexpectedly long waiting time,” he said.

    For instance, if patients knew beforehand that a visit to the polyclinic or hospital would take two hours, they would only show up if they were able to spare the two hours.

    He said: “As long as the wait is not unpleasant, they would generally walk away happy that they were able to get whatever they needed done in the two hours they allocated for the task. Customers who aren’t able to spare the two hours would decide not to show up.”

    This report is a collaborative project between

    Today and the Institute of Service Excellence at Singapore Management University.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 11 Arrested In Connection With Online Gambling Syndicate

    11 Arrested In Connection With Online Gambling Syndicate

    Nine men and two women aged between 26 and 51 were arrested on Sunday (May 3) for their suspected involvement in providing remote gambling services, police said in a news release on Monday.

    This is the first syndicate to be investigated by police after the Remote Gambling Act was introduced last year, the Singapore Police Force said.

    The Criminal Investigation Department on Sunday launched simultaneous raids at various locations, including Balestier, Hougang, Tiong Bahru, Tanjong Pagar, Newton and Woodlands. Officers seized S$215,000 cash, computers, mobile phones, as well as betting records and bank transaction record booklets.

    The suspects are believed to have received illegal bets amounting to about S$3 million in the last two weeks.

    Police investigations are ongoing. If convicted, the suspects could face up to five years’ jail, a fine of between S$20,000 and S$200,000, or both.

    Deputy Commissioner of Police (Investigations and Intelligence) and concurrent Director of the Criminal Investigation Department Tan Chye Hee said: “The Remote Gambling Act 2014 was enacted to tackle groups and individuals who profiteer from unlawful remote gambling to the detriment of the public at large. Police are determined to stamp out unlawful remote gambling and will continue to take tough enforcement actions against those who flout the law.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Nepals Asks Foreign Countries To Wrap Up Search And Rescue Missions

    Nepals Asks Foreign Countries To Wrap Up Search And Rescue Missions

    KATHMANDU – Nepal has asked foreign countries to wrap up search and rescue operations nine days after a devastating earthquake killed more than 7,200 people, now there is no hope of finding people alive in the rubble.

    Dozens of countries sent teams to look for survivors after the Himalayan nation was hit by a 7.8-magnitude quake on April 25, its worst since 1934, but the Nepal government now believes the search and rescue work has been nearly completed.

    “They can leave. If they are also specialists in clearing the rubble, they can stay,” Rameshwor Dangal, an official at Nepal’s home ministry, told Reuters on Monday.

    The quake killed 7,276 people and wounded over 14,300. Nepalese Prime Minister Sushil Koirala earlier estimated the death toll could reach 10,000.

    On Monday, police and local volunteers found the bodies of about 100 trekkers and villagers buried in an avalanche set off by the earthquake in a remote district and were digging through snow and ice for scores more missing.

    Many countries have pledged money that will be necessary to rebuild homes, hospitals and historic buildings. Others such as neighboring India have sent trucks to deliver aid and deployed helicopters to rescue thousands of people from remote towns and villages.

    The chief of India’s National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), which was among the first foreign organizations to arrive after the quake, said it had been asked by the Nepalese government to conclude its search and rescue operation.

    “All the search and rescue teams, not the relief (teams) … have been asked to return,” NDRF Director General O.P. Singh told Indian television. “We will see how best it can be done.”

    The United Nations has said 8 million of Nepal’s 28 million people were affected by the quake, with at least 2 million needing tents, water, food and medicines over the next three months.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Singapore Team Abandoned Plan To Scale Mount Everest, Returns Home

    Singapore Team Abandoned Plan To Scale Mount Everest, Returns Home

    Aluminaid Team Singapore, which gave up its mission to scale Mount Everest following the Nepal earthquake, landed safely at Changi Airport on Monday night (May 4).

    The climbers, Ismail Latiff, Zulkifli Latiff, and Nur Yusrina Yaakob, came back to Singapore after spending two months at Mount Everest. They were evacuated from Everest base camp (EBC) on Friday to Kathmandu Airport, after they abandoned their climb on Apr 29.

    The trio’s return was met with applause and tearful embraces.

    Ms Yusrina, 28, recounted the moment when she witnessed the first earthquake in her life.

    “When the earthquake happened, we definitely felt it – the shaking and everything – but thankfully we were in one of the safest spots of the base camp, we were spared. We just tried to react to the situation, and we got into our tents.”


    Her 50-year-old mother, Ms Rosnani Ismail said tearfully: “I was so worried when I heard of the news. I didn’t know what to think. I just talked to my husband. He didn’t say a word, he was just so quiet. We were thinking about our daughter’s safety.”

    The team had embarked on the mission to mark Singapore’s Golden Jubilee, and had been planning the feat since 2010.

    Aluminaid’s team captain Muhammad Hilwan Mohamed Idrus, who was unable to join them on the trip, told reporters: “The team left Singapore on Mar 25, and their expedition began in rotation – one team would climb and come back to rest for a few days while another team goes up. The teams finished their first rotation and was supposed to go for the second one on Apr 25. But the guide just decided shift it back by one day – a lucky thing to do. If not, they would have met the avalanche.”

    That was not the only close shave for the team. “The earthquake hit the front part of EBC. The EBC is pretty huge, and the team’s base camp site is located at the back of the EBC. Their camp site was unscathed – they were not injured in any way. Just about 100m from the camp site, other tents were flattened. You can imagine how close we are,” Mr Hilwan said.

    As they were unable to proceed up Everest, the team members looked to contributing to the search and rescue efforts.

    “After the avalanche, they were doing a lot of monitoring. They also wanted to help with the search and rescue, but the Nepali operators there did not allow them due to safety issues,” the captain added. “The team was quite shaken and even one of their mountain guide’s uncle was caught in the avalanche and passed away. Their guides were very worried about their families back in Kamanthu, and thank goodness we had out satellite phones, which were passed around to the guides to contact their families.”

    Another team member, Seumas Yeo, returned to Singapore last Wednesday as he suffered from an abscess a week before the earthquake. He was recovering in the hotel post-operation when the quake struck Nepal.

    Describing the experience as “scary”, Mr Yeo said: “The whole building shook and I felt like the roof was going to fall on me. I walked down the street and it was chaotic, people were closing and running out of shops. I saw a collapsed building and people were pulling out bodies from it.”

    He added that many people were huddling under trees for cover, shouting: “Shiva, Shiva!” or chanting Buddhist prayers.

    Mr Hilwan said that the team will be holding a press conference next Monday (May 11).

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • FreeMyInternet Expresses Displeasure With The Media Development Authority

    FreeMyInternet Expresses Displeasure With The Media Development Authority

    The FreeMyInternet group expresses our complete and utter disappointment at the Media Development Authority’s (MDA) action in censoring The Real Singapore (TRS), call for this arbitrary and unsubstantiated action to be revoked immediately, and for MDA to come clean on its processes and standards as a regulatory body.

    While not all of us might necessarily agree with TRS’s editorial direction or content, what TRS is alleged to have done is no reason for MDA to force a shutdown on the site. MDA’s actions exhibited two key problems: Disproportionate power vested in a statutory board, and unclear guidelines on actions to be taken against objectionable content.

    The unfettered power given to MDA is disproportionate in that it gives a statutory board the the sole discretion to close down a website without due process, judiciary or otherwise. This is inconsistent with Singapore’s position as a state that is ruled by law, transparency and accountability.

    Furthermore, MDA claimed TRS has “published prohibited material as defined by the Code to be objectionable on the grounds of public interest, public order and national harmony” and “responsible for several articles that sought to incite anti-foreigner sentiments in Singapore”. In relation to the current court case against TRS, this runs the risk of sub-judice. As a statutory board, MDA should have known better than to take actions that can potentially pre-judge the court case.

    MDA has also clearly exhibited inconsistency in how it approaches “objectionable content”, be it online or in traditional media. MDA has claimed that “TRS has deliberately fabricated articles and falsely attributed them to innocent parties. TRS has also inserted falsehoods in articles that were either plagiarised from local news sources or sent in by contributors so as to make the articles more inflammatory.”

    Objectionable, fabricated and plagiarised content is a regular practice in both mainstream and online media, and most certainly undesirable. But what gives MDA the right to stop the operation of a website on this basis? Websites managed by traditional news outlets have also been known to have fabricated content. Does MDA intend to take action against any website that plagiarises or fabricates content? What is MDA’s basis and standards for taking action, and what are the specific examples cited for TRS? Would it not be sufficient to request for the removal of specific articles rather than the termination of an entire website?

    Ai Takagi and Yang Kaiheng with lawyer Choo Zheng Xi (image - CNA)
    Ai Takagi and Yang Kaiheng with lawyer Choo Zheng Xi (image – CNA)

    Without such clarity and accountability, we are left with no choice but to once again call doubt on MDA’s ability to be a fair and effective media regulator. The unsubstantiated and extraordinary actions taken by MDA against TRS cannot be seen as rules-based, transparent, and fair; only arbitrary and selective. As it is, we can only view MDA’s action against TRS as nothing short of a poorly-conceived and brutal attempt at censorship.

    We also wish to highlight that MDA has chosen to take such action on 3 May,World Press Freedom Day. This is an affront to an international movement championed by the United Nations.

    The FreeMyInternet group reaffirms our position that the right way to deal with any content deemed objectionable and offensive is with open discussion and reasoned debate. Such has also been the position championed by the Media Literacy Council. Shutting anyone down for disagreeable content, by anyone’s standard much less that of a regulator that has been inconsistent in its standards, is a trigger happy approach that reeks of blatant censorship and does not speak well of Singapore as a democratic country.

    The above statement was made in exclusion of Mr Choo Zheng Xi, who is currently representing the editors of TRS in their court case.

    * * * * *

    People walk past mock gravestone during protest against new licensing regulations in SingaporeAbout FreeMyInternet

    The FreeMyInternet movement was founded by a collective of bloggers who are against the licensing requirements imposed by the Singapore government on 1 June 2013, which requires online news sites to put up a performance bond of S$50,000 and comply within 24 hours to remove content that is found to be in breach of content standards. The group believes this to be an attempt at censorship and an infringement on the rights of Singaporeans to access information online and calls for a withdrawal of this licensing regime.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

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