# Lessons learned from the public health response to chemical pollution in Tebrau River, Johor, Malaysia, 2024

**Authors:** Mohd Faiz Ibrahim, Nurazimah Mohd Aris, Afiqah Syamimi Masrani, Noor Adillah Dawad, Md Faizul Abd Razak, Haidar Rizal Toha, Mohd Anwar Shahrir Ahmad, Jeyanthini Sathasivam

PMC · DOI: 10.5365/wpsar.2025.16.2.1235 · Western Pacific Surveillance and Response Journal : WPSAR · 2025-05-27

## TL;DR

A 2024 toxic waste dumping in Malaysia's Tebrau River led to health issues, prompting a public health response and lessons on coordination and data sharing.

## Contribution

The study provides insights into public health responses to chemical pollution and identifies areas for improving cross-district coordination.

## Key findings

- 484 individuals were exposed, with 334 showing symptoms of chemical exposure.
- Timely actions and community engagement helped mitigate health impacts.
- Gaps in coordination and data access were identified as key challenges.

## Abstract

In September 2024, an illegal toxic waste dumping incident along the Tebrau River in Johor State, Malaysia, raised widespread health concerns in Johor Bahru and Kulai districts. The pollution released a strong, unpleasant odour, resulting in acute symptoms among exposed individuals, including sore throat, dizziness and coughing.

The Tebrau River is a vital waterway supporting urban populations in Johor. This was not the first chemical pollution event in the region, as previous incidents, including the Kim Kim River crisis in 2019, highlighted the region’s vulnerability to such events. The involvement of multiple districts and agencies during the response presented challenges in coordination and data sharing.

The Johor Bahru District Health Office promptly deployed a rapid assessment team to assess the affected areas and implement both active and passive case detection. Community engagement targeted vulnerable populations, such as schoolchildren, to minimize exposure risks. Additional dumping sites identified along the Tebrau River prompted expanded surveillance and a state-level response to coordinate efforts across districts and all health-care facilities.

A total of 484 individuals were exposed to the pollution, 334 of whom developed symptoms related to chemical exposure. Timely public health actions consisted of actions to mitigate the impact. Health facilities were placed on high alert and community trust was maintained through proactive engagement. However, gaps in cross-district coordination and challenges accessing environmental data underscored areas for improvement.

This incident highlighted the importance of rapid assessment, cross-sector collaboration, community engagement and integrated data systems. It also showed that effective public health action is possible despite environmental data limitations. The strengthening of communication, standardized protocols and real-time data sharing will be critical to improving future chemical pollution events.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

9 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12163309/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12163309