COVID-19 pandemic in Kuala Lumpur

COVID-19 pandemic in Kuala Lumpur
DiseaseCOVID-19
Virus strainSARS-CoV-2
LocationKuala Lumpur, Malaysia
First outbreakWuhan, Hubei, China
Index caseTitiwangsa
Arrival date5 February 2020
Confirmed cases2,445
Active casesN/A
Recovered2,416
Deaths
18
Government website
https://newslab.malaysiakini.com/covid-19/en/state/kuala-lumpur (Non government)

The COVID-19 pandemic in Kuala Lumpur started when a Chinese male national from Wuhan in the province of Hubei tested positive on 3 February 2020. As of 10 July, Kuala Lumpur confirmed 2,445 cases and 18 fatalities.[1]

Statistics

Distribution of active cases in past 14 days in areas of Kuala Lumpur (as of 19 July 2021)
Area Active cases in past 14 days
1 Lembah Pantai 4
2 Cheras 3
2 Titiwangsa 3
4 Kepong 1
Total 9

Details of death cases in Kuala Lumpur

Details of the confirmed death cases in Kuala Lumpur as of 7 July 2020
Case Number Date of Death Nationality Gender Age Hospitalised Location Patient Data Source Additional Source
1 290 21 March 2020  Malaysia Male 57 Kuala Lumpur Hospital The deceased was identified as Idris Atan, a Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) veteran. He travelled to Vietnam and had direct contact with a Tablighi Jamaat in Masjid Sri Petaling participant. Developed symptoms on 7 March. He died at 3:22 pm, 21 March. He was a veteran PAS member and founded PAS branch in Batu Caves, Selangor on 1988. [2]
2 1334 24 March 2020  Malaysia Male 75 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Identified as Lt Col Rahmad Said, who is a military veteran. First hospitalised in Tuanku Mizan Military Hospital on 16 March before being transferred to Kuala Lumpur Hospital on 18 March. He died at 7:40 pm, 24 March.
3 1056 26 March 2020  Malaysia Male 35 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Identified as Mohd Fairos Saberon, a police inspector. Saberon had travel history to Bandung, Indonesia on early March. Saberon died at 9:30 pm, 26 March.
4 787 29 March 2020  Malaysia Male 77 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had hypertension. Died at 10:40 am, 29 March.
5 2626 27 March 2020  Malaysia Male 69 N/A Had diabetes and hypertension, and travelled to Saudi Arabia before. He died at his home on 27 March and the body was brought to Kuala Lumpur Hospital. He was diagnosed during the post-mortem.
6 193 31 March 2020  Malaysia Female 80 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had diabetes, hypertension and heart disease. Died at 4:30 am, 31 March after 18 days of hospitalisation. She is the close contact of Case 115.
7 1053 31 March 2020  Malaysia Male 62 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had diabetes and hypertension and was a close contact of Case 486. Died at 10:46 pm, 31 March.
8 2149 28 March 2020  Malaysia Female 85 National Heart Institute Had heart disease. Died at 12:10 am, 28 March.
9 3484 4 April 2020  Malaysia Male 68 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had diabetes. Died at 3:40 pm, 4 April.
10 1906 8 April 2020  Pakistan Male 69 Kuala Lumpur Hospital A participant of Tablighi Jamaat event in Masjid Sri Petaling. He died at 9:30 am, 8 April. He lived in Menara City One condominium which was placed under Enhanced Movement Control Order due to spike of cases. He was the 2nd fatality of Kuala Lumpur related to Tabligh cluster.
11 4229 10 April 2020  Malaysia Male 77 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had diabetes. Died at 4 am, 10 April.
12 4818 12 April 2020  Malaysia Male 63 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had heart and kidney disease. Died at 11:36 pm, 12 April.
13 4711 15 April 2020  Malaysia Male 66 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had hypertension and heart disease. Died at 12:55 pm, 15 April. He was a close contact of Case 5332 (15th death).
14 2657 12 April 2020  Malaysia Male 60 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had diabetes and hypertension. Died at 3:20 pm, 12 April.
15 5332 21 April 2020  Malaysia Male 92 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had diabetes, hypertension and dementia. He had close contact with Case 4711 (13th death). Died at 1:30 am, 21 April.
16 2806 24 April 2020  Malaysia Female 62 Kuala Lumpur Hospital She was the mother of Case 1346. Had hypertension. Died at 5:43 pm, 24 April.
17 5441 30 April 2020  Malaysia Male 66 Kuala Lumpur Hospital Had close contact with Case 4818 (12th death) and had cancer. Died at 4 pm, 30 April.
18 7468 12 June 2020  India Male 67 Canselor Tuanku Muhriz UKM Hospital The deceased was identified as Zeawdeen Kadar Masdar, an Indian national from Paramakudi, Tamil Nadu who was detained at the Bukit Jalil Immigration Detention Depot. He had diabetes, hypertension, heart and kidney disease. Masdar was found unconscious on 12 June and was rushed to UKM Hospital, and died. As of 22 June, the post-mortem report is still underway. [3]

Timeline

February 2020

On 3 February, Kuala Lumpur recorded its first case of infection: a 63-year-old Chinese male national. He arrived in Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) from Xiamen of Fujian Province on 18 January with his family. He developed mild fever on 23 January, and was admitted to Kuala Lumpur Hospital (HKL). He was tested positive on 3 February. He wasn't given any antiviral drugs for treatment.

On 5 February, another case was recorded: a 37-year-old Chinese female national. She arrived in Kuala Lumpur International Airport with her mother and three friends on 25 January, and toured around the city. On 1 February, she sought treatment at HKL after having slight fever. The doctor allowed her to go home to rest after prescribing the medicine, but order her and her group to stay indoors and isolate. Health officials continued to monitor the woman and found that her condition persisted until 5 February, where she was referred to HKL and diagnosed at the same day.[4]

References

  1. Razak, Aidila (10 March 2020). "Kuala Lumpur - Covid-19 in Malaysia - Kini News Lab". Malaysiakini. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  2. Razak, Aidila (10 March 2020). "Patient Info - Covid-19 pandemic in Malaysia - Kini News Lab". Malaysiakini. Retrieved 9 July 2020.
  3. "Malaysiakini Facebook Report". 22 June 2020. Retrieved 9 July 2020 via Facebook.
  4. Hui Yuen, Beh; Vanar, Muguntan; Lai, Allison; Kaos Jr, Joseph; Carvalho, Martin (7 February 2020). "Coronavirus: Malaysian woman and tourist from Wuhan bring confirmed cases to 14". The Star. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
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