MJPHM Article Index and Archive Directory

Content Directory

MJPHM Article Index and Archive Directory

Publication: Malaysian Journal of Public Health Medicine (MJPHM)

Publisher: Malaysian Public Health Physicians’ Association

Last reviewed: March 2026

Welcome to the MJPHM Article Index

This page serves as a directory for content previously accessible through the Malaysian Journal of Public Health Medicine’s legacy content management system. As part of MJPHM’s ongoing website modernisation, articles and resources that were previously available through the journal’s Joomla-based platform are being transitioned to a modern, accessible HTML format.

The Malaysian Journal of Public Health Medicine has been the premier publication of the Malaysian Public Health Physicians’ Association since 2001, publishing peer-reviewed research across all domains of public health. The journal has accumulated a substantial archive of research articles, reviews, and commentary spanning topics from infectious disease epidemiology to health policy analysis.

Finding Articles

If you were directed to this page from an external link, the specific article you are seeking may have been relocated as part of the website restructuring. We recommend visiting our homepage for the most current navigation options, or consulting the journal’s search functionality to locate specific articles by title, author, or keyword.

MJPHM’s research covers a wide range of public health topics relevant to Malaysia and the Southeast Asian region, including communicable and non-communicable disease research, environmental and occupational health, health systems and services research, maternal and child health, and public health policy analysis.

Recent Research Highlights

MJPHM continues to publish high-quality public health research. Some areas of recent research focus include the health impact of environmental exposures, occupational health and workplace wellness, chronic disease epidemiology and management, mental health and psychosocial wellbeing, and geospatial approaches to disease surveillance.

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