Nov 11, 2021

Covid-19 (Nov 11): 6,323 cases, R-naught creeps up to 0.99

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COVID-19 | The Health Ministry today reported 6,323 new Covid-19 cases, as the R-naught creeps up to 0.99.

The new daily case count is the highest in 14 days, since Oct 28.

The fresh infections are more than the number of Covid-19 patients who recovered, which totalled 5,337. This is expected to contribute to a rise in the number of active cases.

The R-naught – or reproduction number for new Covid-19 cases – has been on the uptrend since Oct 21.

An R-naught of more than 1.00 suggests that the spread of Covid-19 is accelerating. The R-naught is above 1.00 in Kelantan (1.01), Selangor (1.03), Kuala Lumpur (1.03) and Putrajaya (1.06).

Nationally, the number of hospital admissions in the last seven days have declined by 3.3 percent compared to the preceding week.

The hospitalisation rate of Covid-19 patients is mostly under control. However, new Covid-19 admissions are up in Terengganu (+33 percent), Kuala Lumpur (+17 percent) and Negeri Sembilan (+10 percent).

Covid-19 hospital bed utilisation is highest in Terengganu (89 percent), Kelantan (84 percent) and Malacca (80 percent). Covid-19 beds are a dynamic figure as other parts of hospitals can be repurposed when necessary.

  • Patients in ICU: 538
  • Intubated: 274

 

As of today, the number of Covid-19 patients (including suspected ones) in the intensive care unit (ICU) is 3.1 percent lower compared to a week ago.

Those who require intubation have also declined by 2.1 percent from a week ago.

The breakdown of new cases by state will only be available after midnight. These are the figures for yesterday:

Selangor (1,597)
Kelantan (806)
Sabah (573)
Johor (485)
Sarawak (480)
Kedah (438)
Pahang (367)
Kuala Lumpur (323)
Penang (318)
Terengganu (273)
Perak (200)
Negeri Sembilan (199)
Malacca (125)
Perlis (33)
Putrajaya (19)
Labuan (7)

Genomic surveillance

Only 48 Covid-19 samples have undergone full genomic sequencing this week, all of which were conducted by the UiTM’s Integrative Pharmacogenomics Institute (iPromise) in Puncak Alam, Selangor.

All 48 samples were identified as the Delta variant.

For comparison, a consortium of several health and research institutes in Malaysia (including iPromise) had sequenced 1,047 samples last week, 259 samples two weeks ago, and 134 samples the week before.

Such surveillance is important for monitoring the evolution of the virus and to flag any potentially problematic mutations for further scrutiny.

Made with Flourish

 

Clusters

To date, 288 Covid-19 clusters are still active, including four new ones.

The ongoing clusters have fallen by 21.5 percent from 367 a week ago.

The four new clusters today comprised three workplace clusters (75.0 percent) and one non-education ministry institution cluster (25.0 percent).

Industri Perusahaan Lorong Perak Tiga
Category: Workplace
States: Selangor
District(s): Kuala Langat
Initial tests: 13 out of 116 infected (11.2 percent)

Industri Jalan Peserai
Category: Workplace
States: Johor
District(s): Batu Pahat
Initial tests: 19 out of 239 infected (7.9 percent)

Jalan Gambut Kuantan
Category: Workplace
States: Pahang
District(s): Kuantan
Initial tests: 8 out of 32 infected (25.0 percent)

Jalan Setiawangsa Utama
Category: Non-Education Ministry institution
States: Kuala Lumpur
District(s): Titiwangsa
Initial tests: 6 out of 27 infected (22.2 percent)

Source:Malaysiakini

Covid-19 deaths (Nov 11): 59 reported fatalities, total at 29,486

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COVID-19 | The Health Ministry’s Github data repository reported a total of 59 Covid-19 fatalities yesterday (Nov 10), bringing the cumulative death toll to 29,486.

Malaysia has the highest number of deaths per capita in the Asean and East Asia regions with 891 deaths per one million population.

From the newly reported deaths yesterday, 16.9 percent or 10 died before they could receive treatment at a hospital.

Sarawak recorded the highest number of new deaths at 12, making up 20.3 percent of the newly reported fatalities.

The remaining deaths were in Sabah (11), Perak (8), Kedah (5), Kelantan (4), Penang (4), Terengganu (4), Selangor (3), Kuala Lumpur (3), Johor (2), Malacca (1), Negeri Sembilan (1) and Pahang (1).

No new deaths were reported in Perlis, Labuan and Putrajaya.

A total of 48 out of the 59 reported deaths or 81.4 percent happened in the last seven days.

 

The remaining deaths happened more than a week ago but were only recorded yesterday due to delays in data reporting.

An average of 69 Covid-19 deaths were reported daily in the last 30 days compared to the seven-day average of 56, indicating a downward trend.

To date, 671 Covid-19 deaths have been reported this month.

As of yesterday, there were 62,890 active Covid-19 cases. This is a reduction of 6.4 percent from the 67,160 active infections a week ago.

Compared to 30 days ago, the number of active cases has fallen by 44 percent from 112,379.

Cluster-linked infections

 

The Health Ministry’s post-midnight update also provided further insights into the new Covid-19 infections yesterday.

From the 6,243 new cases yesterday, a total of 247 of them could be traced to ongoing Covid-19 clusters.

From the cluster-linked cases, 169 (68.4 percent) were from workplaces while 55 (22.3 percent) were from education institutions.

Previously, the Health Ministry released deaths statistics together with the number of new Covid-19 cases in the evening. This had since changed.

Deaths statistics are now released after midnight along with other more detailed data. Malaysiakini reports them in the morning.

Source:Malaysiakini