
PEP HIV atau PrEP: What’s the Difference?
Confused about PrEP or PEP HIV? Learn the key differences, when to use each, timing, cost factors, and when to see a doctor fast.

Injuries don’t wait for a convenient moment. A twisted ankle during an evening jog, a child’s fall from a bicycle on a Sunday afternoon, a workplace accident that happens when every clinic in the area is closed — these are exactly the situations where having a 24-hour clinic nearby makes a real difference. At Klinik Dr. Prevents SS15, our in-house doctors assess and treat minor injuries at any hour, without you needing to queue at a hospital emergency department for something that doesn’t require one. We handle it properly, we explain what’s happened, and we make sure you leave knowing exactly what to do next. No appointment needed — just walk in.
The term “minor injury” covers a surprisingly wide range of presentations. In clinical terms, a minor injury is one that does not involve life-threatening trauma, major blood loss, or serious internal injury — but that still requires proper assessment and treatment to heal correctly and avoid complications.
At our SS15 clinic we regularly treat:
If you’re unsure whether your injury qualifies as minor, come in. Our doctors will assess and advise — and if your injury is beyond our scope, we’ll stabilise you and ensure you get to the right place quickly.

Some injuries require an emergency department rather than a GP clinic. Please go directly to the nearest hospital A&E — or call for an ambulance — if you experience:
For everything else — and there is a lot that falls between “emergency” and “nothing” — our SS15 clinic is here around the clock.
Initial assessment: Your doctor will take a focused history — how the injury happened, when, what you felt at the time, and how it has changed since. This context matters. A sprained ankle that happened two days ago and is still swelling behaves differently from one that happened an hour ago.
Physical examination: The injured area will be examined carefully — checking range of motion, point tenderness, swelling, bruising, and neurovascular status (circulation and sensation beyond the injury point). For suspected fractures, the examination follows specific clinical protocols to determine whether imaging is warranted.
Imaging referral: Our clinic can refer you for X-rays where clinically indicated. Your doctor will explain whether imaging is necessary and arrange it accordingly.
Treatment: Depending on the injury, treatment may include wound cleaning and closure, splinting or strapping, application of appropriate dressings, tetanus assessment, pain relief prescription, and detailed home care instructions.
Follow-up planning: Some injuries need review in 24–48 hours. Others need physiotherapy referral. A few need specialist orthopaedic input. Your doctor will be clear about what your injury requires and why — you won’t leave without a plan.


One of the most common mistakes we see at our SS15 clinic is a patient who “walked off” a sprain for several days before coming in, only to find that proper immobilisation from day one would have significantly shortened their recovery.
Ligament sprains, particularly of the ankle, are frequently undertreated. A Grade 1 sprain with mild stretching heals fairly quickly with rest, ice, compression, and elevation. A Grade 2 or Grade 3 sprain — involving partial or complete ligament tearing — may need strapping, a boot, crutches, and physiotherapy to heal correctly and prevent long-term instability.
Our doctors will grade the severity of your sprain on examination and advise the most appropriate management. Treating it properly from the start is always faster and less complicated than dealing with the consequences of under-treatment weeks later.
Children injure themselves constantly — it’s part of growing up. Most childhood injuries are genuinely minor and heal quickly with basic care. But children also present some specific challenges that are worth knowing:
Our doctors are experienced in assessing paediatric injuries and will take the time to examine your child properly and explain findings in a way that makes sense to you as a parent. If you need a broader consultation for your child’s health beyond the injury itself, our general medical consultation service is available at the same clinic.
Subang Jaya has a genuinely active community. Runners along the Subang Lake recreational park, futsal players, gym-goers, badminton and tennis regulars — sports-related injuries are a consistent part of our patient load at SS15, particularly on evenings and weekends when activity peaks.
Common sports injuries we manage include:
Beyond immediate treatment, our doctors can advise on when it’s safe to return to activity, whether physiotherapy referral is appropriate, and how to reduce the risk of re-injury.
Lacerations and cuts that accompany minor injuries often need more than a plaster. Our doctors assess whether a wound requires closure with sutures, skin staples, or adhesive strips — and perform that closure where appropriate. Proper wound closure reduces scarring, speeds healing, and significantly reduces infection risk.
For more detailed information on wound management, including chronic wound care and post-surgical dressing changes, visit our dedicated wound dressing page.

Confused about PrEP or PEP HIV? Learn the key differences, when to use each, timing, cost factors, and when to see a doctor fast.

Kenali early signs of HIV, bila gejala muncul, dan bila anda perlu buat ujian. Panduan ringkas, jelas, dan sulit untuk tindakan awal.

Ketahui faedah pemeriksaan kesihatan syarikat untuk pekerja dan majikan, daripada pengesanan awal penyakit hingga pengurangan cuti sakit.
No appointment is needed. Walk in at any hour — we’re open 24 hours every day including weekends and public holidays.
An experienced doctor can often make a strong clinical assessment based on examination alone. However, definitive confirmation of a fracture requires imaging. Where an X-ray is clinically indicated, your doctor will refer you for one and explain the findings.
It’s never too late to have an injury properly assessed. Some injuries — particularly those that haven’t improved or have worsened — are better caught late than never. Come in and let our doctor take a look.
Yes. Our doctors can issue a medical certificate if your injury makes you unfit to work. Please mention this at registration.
Yes. Elderly patients with falls and impact injuries require particular care — the risk of fracture is higher, and pain may not accurately reflect the severity of an injury. We assess elderly patients thoroughly and refer for imaging more readily than we might in a younger patient.
Follow the RICE principle as a first step — Rest, Ice (wrapped in a cloth, not directly on skin), Compression with a bandage, and Elevation of the injured limb. Avoid heat, massage, and alcohol in the first 48 hours. Then come in for a proper assessment.
The greatest wealth is health.