Malaysia

Nearly 2,000 health workers hit by Covid-19

Health director-general says cases seen rising among those working in red zones, high-risk areas

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 22 Dec 2020 9:24PM

Nearly 2,000 health workers hit by Covid-19
A total of 52,593 health workers in Malaysia have been screened for Covid-19, with 1,880 testing positive for the virus so far. – The Vibes file pic, December 22, 2020

KUALA LUMPUR – The Health Ministry has recorded a total of 1,880 Covid-19 cases among health workers, many of whom have served as frontliners, up till yesterday, director-general Tan Sri Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah said today.

They comprise those who showed symptoms, had returned from duty in Sabah, and those who had high-risk close contacts with other positive cases at work, home or public places.

They also include those placed at facilities where Covid-19 clusters occurred. Some were handling Covid-19 cases that assessments showed to be high-risk, while some were serving at periodic surveillance programmes in selected facilities.

A majority of the health workers – up to 33% of the cases – were infected by transmissions between co-workers. Another 33% got infected from the general community.

A total of 52,593 health workers have been screened for the virus up till December 14.

“The Health Ministry has taken note of developments on the increase in cases among health workers, especially in facilities in red zones and high-risk areas,” Noor Hisham said in a statement.

“Therefore, the ministry always emphasises on the importance of abiding by precautionary and preventive measures for Covid-19 infections among health workers during their duties at health facilities, and especially while they are in the community.”

He said the measures include the practice of the “new normal” during the course of their duties, such as frequent washing of hands, constant wearing of face masks while in health facilities, observing ethics in coughing, and ensuring physical distancing especially in shared areas such as pantries, restrooms, prayer rooms, counters, elevators, and changing rooms, among others.

He said there were also other gate-keeping measures such as measuring body temperatures of workers and declaration of symptoms at facility entrances, apart from daily monitoring of symptoms while on duty.

“Therefore, the ministry urges all frontliners to observe the preventive and precautionary measures so that infections among workers would be avoided,” he said.

He also urged people to cooperate with the ministry by constantly providing true information to the health workers so that an accurate risk assessment can be implemented. – The Vibes, December 22, 2020

Spotlight

Malaysia

Subsidy expanded to more business-owned vehicles ahead of nationwide Budi Diesel rollout

Malaysia

Onn Hafiz: 'I will fight all the way to retain the Machap seat'

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

One child or teen dies from drowning every three days in Malaysia

Malaysia

Johor election battle lines drawn as multi-cornered contests reshape race

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

BMW driven at high speed, loses control, two university students burnt to death

Malaysia

Senior leaders among those who accompanied candidates for nominations

Malaysia

Johor PRN: 56 nomination centres closed, campaigning to kick-off (video)

You may be interested

Malaysia

BMW driven at high speed, loses control, two university students burnt to death

Malaysia

Langkawi sea ambulance to start operating early next year

Malaysia

Police urge responsible conduct as election campaign opens smoothly with 26 permits approved

Malaysia

King calls for modernised defence doctrine to address “Fifth Generation Warfare”

Malaysia

MOH confirms website hack, launches urgent recovery and security review

Malaysia

PH Johor manifesto to feature 10 key agendas focused on cost of living, jobs and housing

Malaysia

LRT3 launch marks new chapter in nation’s integrated public transport drive

Malaysia

One child or teen dies from drowning every three days in Malaysia