MalayMail-July 20

Laden with an icebox, needles, personal protective equipment and other items, the team of volunteers and medical officers stepped out of their van on a narrow kampung road in Beranang, Selangor, one hot Tuesday morning recently. It was uncomfortably humid and the equipment they carried was heavy but that trip on July 6 was necessary to protect bedridden and disabled people — those who are unable to go to vaccination sites (PPV) — from the coronavirus that has torn through Malaysia since March last year. It was the first day of the door-to-door Covid-19 vaccination program by medical non-governmental organizations (NGOs) such as Mercy Malaysia, Islamic Medical Association of Malaysia Response & Relief Team and the National Cancer Society, aided by the Social Welfare Department (JKM) and the Ministry of Health. The success of the program means expansion to other hard-to-reach communities, such as those in the interior, the Orang Asli, the stateless and refugees.

Read more at: https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2021/07/20/registering-the-unregistered-how-malaysia-plans-to-vaccinate-its-invisible/1991223