KUALA LUMPUR - Ten new tuberculosis (TB) clusters have been detected in seven states as of last Saturday, with Johor recording the highest number at 37 cases, said Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad.
The Johor cases involve 29 children and eight adults, with the index case in one cluster traced to a 72-year-old woman in Kota Tinggi.
Dzulkefly said 36 of the cases were identified through active testing and contact tracing by Health Ministry officers in the community.
"As of Feb 7, we have identified 903 close contacts who underwent TB screening. Symptomatic individuals were immediately treated at the Health Ministry facilities,” he said during ministers’ question time in the Dewan Rakyat today.
He added that all the cases have started treatment and are being monitored daily under Directly Observed Therapy at nearby health facilities.
He was responding to a question from Datuk Dr Ahmad Yunus Hairi (PN-Kuala Langat) on the latest status of TB clusters by state, the number of active cases under monitoring, as well as the screening and control measures in place to prevent further spread.
He reported that Selangor recorded the second-highest number of TB cases in the country, with 10 cases across four clusters.
Sabah recorded five cases from one cluster, Pahang four cases from one cluster, and Kedah, Kelantan, and Perlis two cases each from one cluster.
Dzulkefly explained that the Health Ministry is conducting symptom screenings, targeting prolonged cough, fever, loss of appetite, sudden weight loss and clinical lung examinations.
Replying to a follow-up question from Dr Ahmad Yunus on the effectiveness of immunisation in preventing TB, Dzulkefly said that herd immunity through the National Immunisation Programme has reached nearly 99 per cent of children.
He added that over the past four years, immunisation has effectively protected infants from TB, among nearly 500,000 births registered each year. - BERNAMA