The COVID-19 pandemic in Selangor, Malaysia, started when four of eight Chinese nationals from Wuhan was quarantined in a hotel of Johor's Iskandar Puteri was tested positive on 25 January and 28 January 2020, respectively, and was quarantined in Sungai Buloh Hospital, largest hospital of Selangor.
[1] Making it the worst effected state in Malaysia (N)=No new cases in past 14 days Total cumulative cases in Selangor On 24 January, eight Chinese nationals from Wuhan of Hubei Province entered Johor via Tuas checkpoint of neighbouring Singapore.
She had negative results earlier but she went to Sungai Buloh Hospital to take care of her two infected child, where she got tested positive too.
His 40-year-old sister who was in Kedah, who visited him during Chinese New Year, was also diagnosed 2 days later, making her the first locally transmitted case of COVID-19 in Malaysia.
On 14 February, the first 4 patients of Selangor which was treated in Sungai Buloh Hospital, was fully recovered and discharged.
After passing the medical examination in Cambodia on 13 February, she was allowed to return to US by Cambodian authorities.
But since Cambodia don't have direct flight to Europe or the US, she have to fly to Malaysia and transfer plane to US.
She was diagnosed with abnormal temperature screening in KLIA and was admitted to Sungai Buloh Hospital, where she was tested positive.
[35] On 27 February 2020, a Tablighi Jamaat event was held in a mosque of Sri Petaling, Kuala Lumpur.
On 1 March 2020, Hisham Hamdan, who is the executive director of Khazanah Nasional and chairman of UDA Holdings Berhad, was tested positive for COVID-19.
He developed symptoms on 27 February and sought treatment in Subang Jaya Medical Centre.
Case 33 was a senior lawyer and member of UDA Holdings Berhad, Rosli Dahlan.
[39] On mid-March, main cluster of Malaysia has slowly turned from Case 26 & 33 to Tabligh Jamaat.
Brunei, Indonesia, Cambodia, Philippines and other Southeast Asian nations had reported multiple confirmed cases from Tabligh Jamaat event.
[40] On 16 March, Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin held a nationwide live telecast at night, to announce the implementation of Movement Control Order (MCO).
On 17 March, Malaysia reported its first two fatalities: a 60-year-old pastor from Good News Fellowship Conference, Kuching, Sarawak, who was identified as David Cheng, and a 34-year-old man from Johor Bahru, Johor, who attended Tabligh Jamaat event in Kuala Lumpur.
They held a wedding ceremony on 6–7 March in Bandar Baru Bangi of Hulu Langat District.
44 health workers from Teluk Intan Hospital attended this wedding, as the couple was a doctor and a nurse.
He had heart disease and hypertension, and he died in Canselor Tuanku Muhriz UKM Hospital near Ampang, Hulu Langat District.
On 28 March, Director-General of Health of Malaysia, Noor Hisham Abdullah, said that the 62-year-old man got tested negative during the press conference.
Both of them were treated at University Malaya Medical Centre and has diabetes, hypertension and kidney disease.
[53] On March 30, no fatalities of Selangor residents were recorded, but a worker of Human Resources Department of MOH from Putrajaya, the administrative center of Malaysia, had died in Sungai Buloh Hospital.
She had travel history to Indonesia, and was admitted to Putrajaya Hospital on 17 March after showing symptoms for five days.
The 2 new clusters were Good News Fellowship Conference which was held in Kuching, Sarawak in late-February, and a wedding ceremony in Bandar Baru Bangi.
[72] A day later, an 82-year-old Malaysian man with hypertension and heart disease died in Sungai Buloh Hospital.
The new deceased was a 65-year-old Malaysian man who have diabetes, hypertension and kidney disease and was treated in Sungai Buloh Hospital.
[81] Condition outside Kuala Lumpur had stayed stable since 26 May, as cases inside Bukit Jalil IDD (Immigration Detention Depot) rises.
He died after almost three months of treatment in Sungai Buloh Hospital, and he had attended Tablighi Jamaat event in Masjid Sri Petaling in Kuala Lumpur on late-February.
The one patient in Selangor was a person who stayed in the center from 16 to 19 July, and was confirmed positive on 1 August.
[85] On 1 February, Selangor's "State Investment, Industry and Commerce, and Small and Medium Entreprises" (SMEs) chairman Teng Chang Khim has announced that the state's Chinese New Year celebration will be held online via social media due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.