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The COVID-19 pandemic in Malaysia has had significant impacts on the country's healthcare system, economy, and daily life.
On 4 June, Malaysia reports 277 new cases of COVID-19, making it the highest new cases a day of Malaysia, but situation in Johor stayed stable. [89] 270 of 277 new cases are in Bukit Jalil Immigration Detention Depot. [90] On 5 June, another fatality was recorded in Kluang Hospital. The victim was a 61-year-old man who have chronic illness. [91]
On 13 February, Director-General of Health Noor Hisham Abdullah confirmed that COVID-19 data would potentially be released on a weekly rather than daily basis from March 2023. [70] On 16 February, the Sabah state government confirmed that it would change the frequency of its COVID-19 statements from daily updates to weekly updates issued on Monday.
As cases rises, Selangor reports 46 new cases on 24 May, bringing the total to 1,776. [79] On 25 May, Malaysia reports 172 new cases nationwide, highest since 11 April. Most of the cases concentrated in Bukit Jalil Immigration Detention Depot of Kuala Lumpur, and Immigration Detention Depot in Selangor had also seen dramatic rise in cases. [80]
A healthcare worker in the Ministry of Health who was a close contact of a positive case. Had chronic illness. Hospitalised on 6 April 2020. [34] 95 4129 22 April 2020 Malaysia: Male 67 Tengku Ampuan Afzan Hospital Close contact of case number 1575 (57th death case). Had chronic illness. Hospitalised on 8 April 2020. 96 2978 24 April 2020 ...
The COVID-19 pandemic in Southeast Asia is part of the ongoing worldwide pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). It was confirmed to have spread to Southeast Asia on 13 January 2020, when a 61-year-old woman from Wuhan tested positive in Thailand , making it the ...
On December 24, Malaysia exceeded more than 100,000 COVID-19 cases. [437] On 26 December, a record number of 2,335 new cases were confirmed that day. On 30 December, Johor recorded the highest number of cases since the COVID-19 outbreak with a total of 607 cases, with 374 of them coming from the Tembok Choh prison cluster. [448]
Following the rise in COVID-19 cases in Malaysia, local companies and the Chinese government were involved in the distribution of aid and medical supplies in Malaysia. In addition, Malaysia received aid from the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, Taiwan, Turkey and the multinational corporation McDonald's.