Corrigendum to "Caring for people living with dementia and their informal caregivers: Current perspectives in Malaysia"
Ken Joey Loh, Alvin Lai Oon Ng, Yook Chin Chia, Wan Ling Lee, Devi Mohan, Elil Renganathan

Abstract
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TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving
In our article titled “Caring for people living with dementia and their informal caregivers: Current perspectives in Malaysia” published in this journal (Malaysian Family Physician (2024;19:69)),^1^ we would like to bring to the readers’ attention to certain discrepancies that have come to light.
The authors received feedback highlighting misreport of certain information in the aforementioned article. Specifically, on “Gap 2: Systemic challenges in primary care settings hinder the provision of comprehensive dementia care” (page 3), the sentences “Another commonly reported barrier is time constraints. At outpatient clinics in Malaysia, the average doctor-patient consultation time spans from 10 to 20 minutes. [21]” may be misleading. The original literature by Ahmad, Khairatul & Farnaza (2017)^2^ was not a nationwide study; rather, the study was conducted among the patients in one primary healthcare clinic in Malaysia. Hence, to clarify this misleading information, we have corrected the original sentences to: “Another commonly reported barrier is time constraints. A study conducted at a primary healthcare clinic in Malaysia revealed the average doctor-patient consultation time to span from 10 to 20 minutes. [21]”.
Another feedback on misreport was found in “Gap 4: The lack of awareness about dementia restricts help-seeking behaviour” (page 4). The sentence “Nonetheless, a recent cross-sectional study revealed that 92.8% of older adults in Malaysia, including those at risk of developing mild cognitive impairment, had low dementia awareness. [28]” might be misleading. The original literature by Ali, Ja’afar, Krishnan et al. (2023)^3^ was not a nationwide study; rather, the survey was conducted among the elderly patients in one university-based primary care clinic in Malaysia. Hence, this sentence has been corrected to: “Nonetheless, a recent cross-sectional study revealed that 92.8% of older adults from a university-based primary care clinic in Malaysia, including those at risk of developing mild cognitive impairment, had low dementia awareness.[28]”
We acknowledge the oversight in not explicitly clarifying the study populations of the respective publications in our article. We assure our readers that the rest of the information reported in our article remain accurate to the sources.
The reference list from the paper itself. Each links out to its DOI / PubMed record.
- 1Loh KJ Ng ALO Chia YC Lee WL Mohan D Renganathan E Caring for people living with dementia and their informal caregivers: Current perspectives in Malaysia.Malays Fam Physician.2024196910.51866/cm.67439780913 PMC 11708825 · doi ↗ · pubmed ↗
- 2Ahmad B Khairatul K Farnaza A An assessment of patient waiting and consultation time in a primary healthcare clinic.Malays Fam Physician.2017121142128503269 PMC 5420318 · pubmed ↗
- 3Ali MR Ja'afar NIS Krishnan TG et al Dementia awareness among elderly at risk for developing mild cognitive impairment: a cross-sectional study at a university-based primary care clinic.BMC Geriatr.202323149610.1186/s 12877-023-04230-437592221 PMC 10436505 · doi ↗ · pubmed ↗
