The Borneo Post

Covid-19: New cases back to double digits — Health DG

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PUTRAJAYA: Malaysia’s daily Covid-19 new case tally returned to double digits yesterday after 10 cases were reported overnight.

Health director-general Datuk Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah said out of the 10, seven were imported cases, involving Malaysians who were infected abroad.

“Of the three local transmissi­ons, one was a foreign national detainee in Seremban who had undergone screening before being transferre­d to prison.

“Among Malaysians, meanwhile, one positive case was reported in Kuala Lumpur during pre-surgery screening at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia’s Hospital Canselor Tuanku Muhriz (HCTM), and this patient has been transferre­d to the Sungai Buloh Hospital,” he said in a statement on Covid-19 developmen­ts yesterday. The other local transmissi­on was detected in Sabah in which a health worker tested positive during screening upon completion of duty at a quarantine centre in Likas.

Dr Noor Hisham said this latest developmen­t brings Malaysia’s Covid-19 infection tally to 8,658 cases, with active cases at 76.

The total number of Covid19 recoveries is now at 97.7 per cent or 8,461 cases, including 15 cases reported yesterday, he said, adding that the death toll remains at 121 cases or 1.39 per cent of the overall case tally after no new deaths were reported.

“There are two cases being treated in the intensive care unit (ICU), with both requiring ventilator support,” he said.

In a separate developmen­t, he said the observatio­n period for the Pudu Cluster, a residentia­l cluster in Kuala Lumpur that was detected after the screening of a constructi­on site worker, ended yesterday.

“The first case for this cluster was detected on May 10 after workers at this constructi­on site were screened.

“Until July 3, a total of 3,387 people were screened and 80 of them tested positive for Covid19 (2.36 per cent). A total of 97.5 per cent from this cluster were non-Malaysians,” he said.

He said they comprised 69 Bangladesh­is, seven Myanmar nationals, two Indonesian­s and two Malaysians. — Bernama

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