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Health Emergency Action Plan: Roadmap to Recovery from COVID-19

The Malaysian public recognises that the nation is in a critical juncture with the COVID-19 pandemic spreading unchecked and health services overrun in crisis states. We recognise that most national strategies so far are demonstrably failing and that COVID-19 is becoming endemic in Malaysia.

We would like to offer a Health Emergency Action Plan (HEAP). The aim of offering these ideas and making these suggestions is not to apportion blame or point fingers at failure but to offer a ‘Roadmap to Recovery from COVID-19’.

The HEAP is based on three guiding principles:

  • Trust is crucial to fighting the pandemic and this is based on transparency;
  • There must be an all-of-society approach;
  • And we need a set of solutions that are not lockdown-based.

The full document with ideas and suggestions is available from this downloadable link: https://bit.ly/3hTVnHb. The document is made freely available for use (open source). We also welcome all those who would seek to improve on these recommendations.

The key thrust of our recommendations are:

  1.   Interrupting community spread of COVID-19 by having a comprehensive national testing strategy, tracing all contacts, enabling public self-test, home quarantine with monitoring, and limiting non-critical social interaction.
  2.   Ramping up genome testing to monitor COVID-19 variants.
  3.   Increasing support for MOH hospitals and clinics by improving conditions for contract staff, improving ventilation and ICU capacity, offering respite for staff and ensuring a multi-sectoral approach with civil society support.
  4.   Data transparency and sharing with the public is important. The media should be engaged as partners to communicate better metrics that monitor the pandemic and hospital situation, as well as combat rumours and fake news.
  5.   Strong cooperative leadership is vital and we propose a national coordinating unit that reports to the cabinet and parliament. Decision-making should be decentralised to states to enable rapid local action capacity.
  6.   Vaccination and vaccination sites need to be ramped up with less reliance on mega PPVs and better use of maternal-child health clinics, school health teams and general practitioners. Outreach programmes are necessary to reach those unable to register as well as non-citizens. While we want to fix ‘hot spots’, equitable vaccination distribution is important for all states.
  7.   Community responsibility and support is integral to making headway in this pandemic. This requires simpler, science-based SOPs, using RTK-Ag testing to enable a return to work, significant improvement in workplace ventilation and a safety net for the poor.

Kindly see the full document for the details.

We realise that the worst is yet to come, and call for urgent effective action backed by political will and competence.

Although there have been calls of an ‘all-of-society’ approach, this has not happened due to limited public engagement.

Now, as never before, we need to come together and work together to see our nation out of this turmoil.

 

Prepared by (alphabetical order):
Dato’ Dr Amar Singh-HSS
Dr Khor Swee Kheng
Prof Datuk Dr Lokman Hakim Sulaiman
Dato’ Dr Zainal Ariffin Omar

 

Endorsed by (alphabetical order):

Associations

  1. Academy of Medicine Malaysia (AMM)
  2. Association of Malaysian Optometrists (AMO)
  3. College of Anaesthesiologists, Academy of Medicine Malaysia (COA, AMM)
  4. College of Physicians, Academy of Medicine Malaysia (COP, AMM)
  5. Malaysian Association of Dental Public Health Specialists
  6. Malaysian Association of Environmental Health (MAEH)
  7. Malaysian Medical Association Public Health Society (MMA PHS)
  8. Malaysian Pharmacists Society (MPS)
  9. Malaysian Society of Anaesthesiologists (MSA)
  10. Malaysian Society of Clinical Psychologists (MSCP)
  11. Malaysian Society of Intensive Care (MSIC)
  12. Malaysian Society of Occupational Safety and Health (MSOSH)
  13. Medical Assistants Association of Malaysia (PPPM)
  14. Medical Practitioners Coalition Association of Malaysia
  15. National Cancer Society of Malaysia (NCSM)
  16. Obstetrical & Gynaecological Society of Malaysia (OGSM)
  17. Perinatal Society of Malaysia (PSM)
  18. Persatuan Dermatologi Malaysia (PDM)
  19. Public Health Physicians Association of Malaysia (PPPKAM)
  20. Malaysian Health Coalition (MHC)

 

Individuals

  1. Prof Dr Ahmad Hata Rasit
  2. Dr Andre Das
  3. Mr Amrahi Buang
  4. Dr Azlina Firzah Abdul Aziz
  5. Prof Dr Asri Said
  6. Dr Christopher Ho Chee Kong
  7. Dr Hung Liang Choo
  8. Dr Khor Swee Kheng
  9.   Dr Koh Kar Chai
  10.   Dr Margaret Leow Poh Gaik
  11.   Prof Dr (Mr) Lim Kean Ghee
  12.   Prof Dr Roslina Abdul Manap
  13.   Prof Dr Sharifa Ezat Wan Puteh
  14.   A/Prof Dr Shireen Nah
  15.   Dr Siow Sze Li
  16.   A/Prof Dr Uma Devi Palanisamy
  17.   Prof Dr Zaleha Abdullah Mahdy
  18.   Datuk Dr Zulkifli Ismail
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