Here’s what has changed since the last time Malaysia’s daily COVID-19 cases were over 10,000

Malaysia’s daily new COVID-19 cases record hit 10,089 yesterday, going over 10,000 cases for the first time in more than four months and seemingly pushing back the work of months of vaccination drives and pandemic-related restrictions.

Before yesterday, the last record above 10,000 cases in the country was the 10,915 infections recorded on October 2, 2021.

Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin yesterday said the recent rise in cases was due to Malaysia feeling the full effects of a wave of infections with the COVID-19 Omicron variant, adding that he expects daily cases to reach 15,000 soon.

Although COVID-19 and Omicron remain a grave threat to lives nationwide, a look at Health Ministry data reveals that other key statistics — aside from daily cases — have not seen a similar rise in number.

Deaths

For example, the number of deaths recorded on October 2, 2021 was 109. In comparison, there were nine COVID-19 deaths recorded yesterday.

Moreover, there was an average of 83 COVID-19 related deaths for the week up to October 2, 2021. Meanwhile, yesterday, the seven-day average was 10 deaths.

As of yesterday, 96.5 per cent of the 2,812,614 people infected with COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic in Malaysia have recovered.

On October 2 last year, the recovery rate was 92 per cent, based on the total 2,086,111 people infected with the novel coronavirus at the time.

ICU

On October 2 last year, there were 888 patients warded in COVID-19 intensive care units (ICU) nationwide, with 484 of them needing ventilators to help them breathe.

Yesterday, there were 137 COVID-19 related ICU patients, with 71 needing ventilator assistance.

Also yesterday, the percentage of ICU bed occupancy nationwide was at 52.6 per cent.

Although an exact percentage for October 2, 2021 is unavailable, a World Health Organisation (WHO) report on October 3 the same year said that the average COVID-19 ICU bed occupancy rate in Malaysia was 56.2 per cent for that week.

Active cases

Compared to the 155,823 active COVID-19 cases recorded on October 2 last year, active cases numbered 69,572 yesterday — a drop of 55.4 per cent.

Malaysia recorded 11,034 new COVID-19 cases today, marking a jump of almost 1,000 cases from yesterday’s 10,089 figure. This latest development brings cumulative COVID-19 cases in Malaysia to 2,925,254 since the pandemic began two years ago. The country has also reported over 32,000 deaths in the same period.

About 97.9 per cent of Malaysia’s adult population has been fully vaccinated with either a single or two-dose vaccine, while 52.3 per cent have also received the booster shot. Approximately, 88.7 per cent of those aged 12 to 17 have also received two doses of the vaccine. Vaccinations for those aged five to 11 rolled out last week.—  Malay Mail

Recent Posts

iCaur 03 iWD is now locally assembled in Malaysia: Still priced at RM130k

iCaur Malaysia has announced the official availability of the iCaur 03 CKD, which is locally…

7 hours ago

Huawei Watch Fit 5 series launched in Malaysia with diabetes risk analysis & ECG, priced from RM799

Huawei has introduced two new smartwatches in its Watch Fit series — the Huawei Watch…

7 hours ago

MAA warns limiting EV choices could derail Malaysia’s Net Zero emission goals

The Malaysian Automotive Association (MAA) has expressed concern over Malaysia’s updated CBU EV policy, saying…

9 hours ago

DC Handal turns on 6x 22kW AC Charge Points at The Exchange TRX, RM1 per kWh

There are now more EV chargers available at The Exchange Mall at TRX. DC Handal…

15 hours ago

Google cuts AI Ultra pricing in Malaysia, now starts from RM429.99/month with 20TB storage

Google has revised its Google AI Ultra subscription pricing in Malaysia, introducing a new Ultra…

17 hours ago

Samsung and Google tease Gemini-powered smart glasses, their answer to Meta Ray-Bans

Samsung has officially teased a new pair of AI-powered smart glasses developed together with Google,…

18 hours ago

This website uses cookies.