Covid-19 rise tests Malaysia hospitals as Philippines reopens wards
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Malaysia recorded 20 deaths in the two weeks to April 29.
PHOTO: AFP
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KUALA LUMPUR – Rising Covid-19 cases
More than 70 per cent of government hospital beds in Malaysia were occupied as at April 29, up more than 20 percentage points from a week earlier, and the authorities have appealed to anyone testing positive to abide by a mandated seven-day quarantine in an effort to stem the pressure on its medical system.
The jump is being fuelled by gatherings over the recent long Hari Raya Aidilfitri holiday, with the country also recording 20 deaths in the two weeks to April 29 – 25 per cent more fatalities than the previous 14 days.
In the neighbouring Philippines, positive rates among people tested jumped
Its health department has since asked hospitals to reopen Covid-19 treatment facilities in a bid to curb the spike in cases, despite more than 80 per cent of the nation’s regular hospital beds and intensive care units sitting empty.
Cases have also risen in Vietnam, which has reimposed some pandemic-era restrictions in key cities. Indoor mask-wearing mandates have since late last month been in effect in public spaces in the capital Hanoi, while commercial hub Ho Chi Minh City has ordered masks to be worn again on school campuses.
In Singapore, rising demand from an ageing population
The surge comes as health care systems in South-east Asia have already been under strain following years of the pandemic, so the prospect of hospital resources coming under further pressure is ringing officials’ alarm bells.
One of the biggest sources of pressure is acute medical staff shortages, following Covid-19 era exoduses over grueling hours and low pay.
Developing nations in the region, including the Philippines – the world’s biggest exporter of nurses – are also disadvantaged in a global bidding war for doctors, nurses and other personnel by deeper-pocketed countries similarly in need of medical workers. BLOOMBERG

