It’s a miracle I’m alive: former Malaysia PM Mahathir

A doctor himself, he said he did not know how the medical team managed to help him regain his health.

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March 30, 2022

PETALING JAYA – Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad thought he was not going to make it when he was admitted to the National Heart Institute (IJN) in January, says the former prime minister.

A doctor himself, he said he did not know how the medical team managed to help him regain his health.

“To me, it is a miracle. I didn’t expect to live, I expected that I would die because I am old and also suffering from serious diseases affecting … my heart.

“When the heart is weak, it affects the lungs and when the lungs are weak, this affects the kidney and so on.

“But somehow, the doctors turned me around and eventually I was discharged and am quite well – not 100%, but enough for me to continue with the little work that I have to do,” he said in a speech during an appreciation ceremony for the medical experts and staff who had treated him.

The event at Yayasan Kepimpinan Perdana in Putrajaya on Monday was recorded and uploaded to his YouTube account.

Dr Mahathir, 96, said Malaysia has made tremendous progress, especially in the medical sector, and he believes that Malaysians are capable of doing what others can do.

“This is something that we can feel very proud of because you don’t need to go elsewhere.

“In Malaysia, we have specialists to treat cases such as mine which are very serious,” he added.

Dr Mahathir said when he suffered his first heart attack in 1989, he was told to go to the Mayo Clinic in the United States, but he chose to be treated at Hospital Kuala Lumpur.

“I was also trained as a doctor and when I started my practice way back in the 1950s and early 1960s, there was no work for Malaysian doctors, especially Malay doctors.

“The doctors at that time were known as assistant medical officers – no Asian could become full medical officer and you were not allowed to perform even simple things such as an appendectomy, because there was no faith in Malaysian doctors.

“But today, we can even perform surgery on 17-day-old conjoined twins,” he said, referring to the premature conjoined twins who were successfully separated by a surgical team at Hospital Tunku Azizah (HTA) in Kuala Lumpur recently.

In the eight-minute video, Dr Mahathir, who is also Langkawi MP, presented certificates of appreciation to the medical team.

He was admitted to IJN on Jan 7 to undergo an elective medical procedure a day later and was discharged on Jan 13, but was admitted again and later discharged on Feb 5.

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