Monday, December 28, 2020

Covid-19: Malaysian woman among 5 new imported cases in Singapore

 


Singapore's Health Ministry confirmed that one of the five imported Covid-19 cases in the republic announced Sunday (Dec 27) was a 23-year-old Malaysian woman.

The woman had served her Stay-Home Notice (SHN) at a hotel in the island state.

The ministry said she was transferred to another dedicated facility on Dec 20 when ministry officials commenced investigations into 13 previously reported cases who had served SHN at the same hotel between Oct 22 and Nov 11.

Labelled as case 58762, the work permit holder was swabbed on Dec 19 and Dec 21 and her test results were negative for Covid-19, said the ministry in its full data released late last night.

"Her swab on Dec 24 at the end of SHN came back positive, and she was conveyed to the hospital the next day. A confirmatory test by the National Public Health Laboratory (NPHL) was also positive," it said.

However, the ministry said a second sample taken by NPHL on Dec 26 came back negative, and her serological test result has also come back negative.

The ministry noted that investigations are ongoing to assess if she, who is asymptomatic, could be linked to the 13 cases.

The ministry on Dec 19 said that the 13 imported cases were observed to have high genetic similarity despite the cases having arrived from different countries, including Bahrain, Canada, Indonesia, Myanmar, Netherlands, Philippines, South Korea, UAE, UK, and the US.

As of noon Sunday, the republic reported a total of five new cases, with none in the community or residing in dormitories, thus bringing the total infection in Singapore to 58,524.

The ministry has so far classified 1,742 of the reported cases as imported, 2,276 as community cases and 54,506 involving dorm residents.

Bernama

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.