Health Minister S. Subramaniam says as of this week, 22 people had
died from dengue in 2014 - compared to eight deaths over the same
stretch last year.
While still early in the year, at the current
pace the numbers would surpass 2010 - the deadliest year on record, when
134 people died from the illness.
A total of 11,879 cases had been reported as of Monday, up nearly four-fold from the same period in 2013.
"I think the number of cases will increase," Mr Subramaniam said.
"We urge the public to play their role. The spike in cases is putting a strain on our medical services."
More than 43,000 cases were reported in 2013, with 92 deaths, up from 35 dead the year before.
"Every three to four years, we witness a peak in the cycle," Mr Subramaniam said.
Dengue
fever is a flu-like illness marked by symptoms including nausea,
headache, and severe muscle and joint pain that gives rise to its
nickname "break-bone fever".
In severe cases, it can cause internal bleeding, organ impairment, respiratory distress and death.
Dengue
is transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which can pick up the
virus from an infected human and transmit it to the next person it
bites.
According to the World Health Organisation, which has
labelled dengue one of the fastest-growing viral threats globally, the
disease may be infecting up to 50-100 million people each year.
There is no vaccine, so prevention focuses on mosquito control.
Malaysian
authorities have stepped up a nationwide campaign to fumigate or
eliminate mosquito breeding hotbeds in standing water, garbage dumps and
construction sites.
This includes what authorities have called
the first large-scale use in Malaysia of the biological agent bacillus
thuringiensis israelensis, or BTI, a naturally-occurring bacterium used
in insect control.
The government also has ordered local clinics
in dengue "hot spot" areas - which have been concentrated in and around
the capital Kuala Lumpur - to extend their operating hours to
accommodate the roughly 2,000 new cases emerging weekly.
"Hot spot" residents also are being advised to wear long sleeves and use mosquito repellent.
Researchers estimate around three billion people live in regions of the world susceptible to dengue.
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