JPSI (Journal of Public Sector Innovations)
Vol. 6 No. 2 (2022): May 2022

Refining The Dengue Vulnerability Assessment Based on Dengue Vulnerability Framework Malaysia (DVFM): Descriptive and Panel Data Analysis

Zuliana Azwa Zulkifli (1)School of Government, College of Law, Government and International Studies (COLGIS), Universiti Utara Malaysia. 2) Centre for Policy Research and International Studies (CenPRIS), Universiti Sains Malaysia)
Azeem Fazwan Ahmad Farouk (Centre for Policy Research and International Studies (CenPRIS), Universiti Sains Malaysia)
Dayang Haszelinna Abang Ali (Centre for Policy Research and International Studies (CenPRIS), Universiti Sains Malaysia)
Norhayati Mokhtar (Disease Control Centre, Vector Control Disease Sector. Ministry of Health Malaysia (MOH))



Article Info

Publish Date
31 May 2022

Abstract

This study refining the dengue vulnerability assessment using DVFM to describes the vulnerability of dengue in Malaysia during the period of 15 years to identify high-low risk areas among sample of studies (except Wilayah Persekutuan Putrajaya). The dengue reported cases in Malaysia were analyzed using the data provided by the Disease Control Division Vector, Ministry of Health Malaysia (MOH) from 2003-2017. As per literature, factors influencing the vulnerability to infectious disease outbreak were identified as population density, urbanization, medical care workforce, medical care infrastructure, public health delivery, safe water and sanitation as well as economic strength. This framework was tested using empirical cases of dengue outbreak in Malaysia. The dataset used was obtained from widely available data (from the Department of Statistics Malaysia (DOSM) and Health Indicator Report by MOH). From 2003-2017, 829, 299 cases have been reported in Malaysia. The highest number was recorded in 2015 (63198, Selangor). The key findings from this assessment included the states with their vulnerability and actual dengue reported cases. The results also concluded that the framework prediction did not match the actual outbreak reported.  Recently in Malaysia, the reported cases have increased steadily in most areas. The surveillance and control strategies should be strengthened especially for areas with the most vulnerable to dengue outbreak without deprioritizing the least vulnerable state. Further research should be conducted to explore other drivers that may reflect the vulnerability of dengue outbreak.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

jpsi

Publisher

Subject

Humanities Education Environmental Science

Description

JPSI is available for free (open access) to all readers. The articles in JPSI include developments and researches in Public Policy, Public Management, and Local Administration (theoretical studies, experiments, and its ...