Tag: MERS

  • Saudi Health Minister: MERS Cases Are Reducing Before Haj

    Saudi Health Minister: MERS Cases Are Reducing Before Haj

    MECCA: A recent surge in cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS), a sometimes deadly virus, in Saudi Arabia has ebbed in the run-up to Islam’s annual haj pilgrimage, the kingdom’s Health Minister Khaled al-Falih said on Thursday.

    As pilgrims poured into Mecca from around the world, the Health Ministry said it had confirmed two more cases of the disease in Riyadh on Thursday, but the number of cases has declined since last month, Falih said.

    Most medical staffers touring hospitals and medical centers around Mecca on Wednesday covered their noses and mouths with masks, as did traffic policemen and army personnel deployed to secure the flow of busses carrying pilgrims into the holy city.

    “With the help of God and then with the measures taken by the ministry of health we hope to prevent the virus from getting to the pilgrims,” said Falih in a news conference.

    So far around 1.2 million Muslims have arrived in the kingdom for haj.

    In past years it has drawn up to 3 million pilgrims, but authorities have limited numbers in the past two years because of construction work around the Grand Mosque.

    Saudi Arabia has banned the slaughter of camels around the holy cities during the pilgrimage. The animals have been found to carry the virus and scientists say they are the most likely source of primary infections of people.

    Seven people in the city of Medina who have been infected by MERS have been moved to Riyadh as a precaution to avoid any spread of the disease near the pilgrimage sites, Falih said.

    “The spread has begun to shrink and we are optimistic the days of spreading are gone and are behind us,” said Falih.

    The kingdom has mobilized 25,000 medical staff from different cities into Mecca for the haj season.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Thailand Confirms First MERS Case

    Thailand Confirms First MERS Case

    BANGKOK – Thailand confirmed its first case of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) on Thursday, becoming the fourth Asian country to register the deadly virus this year.

    Public Health Minister Rajata Rajatanavin told a news conference that a 75-year-old businessman from Oman had tested positive for MERS.

    “From two lab tests we can confirm that the MERS virus was found,” Rajata said, adding the man had traveled to Bangkok for medical treatment for a heart condition.

    “The first day he came he was checked for the virus. The patient … contracted the MERS virus.”

    The health minister said 59 others were being monitored for the virus, including three of the man’s relatives who traveled with him to Bangkok.

    MERS is caused by a coronavirus from the same family as the one that triggered China’s deadly 2003 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).

    The vast majority of MERS infections and deaths have been in Saudi Arabia, where more than 1,000 people have been infected since 2012, and about 454 have died.

    Last month, a MERS outbreak erupted in South Korea resulting in 23 deaths so far. A total of 165 people have been infected and 6,700 people are in quarantine.

    But there have been signs that the outbreak, the largest outside of Saudi Arabia, may be slowing in South Korea. The daily number of new cases has dropped to single digits this week compared to as many as 23 last week. Three were reported on Thursday – the lowest number since June 1.

    All of the infections known to have occurred in South Korea have taken place in healthcare facilities. Three hospitals have been at least partially shut and two have been locked down with patients and medical staff inside.

    China and the Philippines have also reported one MERS case this year.

    Earlier, Thailand’s Disease Control Department said it was screening travelers at 67 points of entry.

    “We are checking 67 ports including land, sea and air,” said Sophon Mekthon, secretary-general of Thailand’s Disease Control Department.

    “We’ve told all hospitals in Thailand to be on alert. Those who come back from the Middle East and South Korea must be checked thoroughly.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • South Korean Man Latest Fatility From MERS

    South Korean Man Latest Fatility From MERS

    SEOUL – A South Korean man with terminal lung cancer who had been infected with the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) virus died on Thursday, South Korea’s health ministry said, in the 10th fatality since the country’s outbreak began last month.

    The 65-year-old man, diagnosed with MERS on June 7, had been hospitalized in the same ward as another patient later diagnosed with MERS, the health ministry said in a statement.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • South Korea: 14 New MERS Cases Reported

    South Korea: 14 New MERS Cases Reported

    SEOUL: South Korea’s Health Ministry on Thursday reported 14 new cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS), taking the total to 122 in an outbreak that is the largest outside Saudi Arabia.

    Among the newly reported cases was a pregnant woman who contracted the virus at the emergency ward of a Seoul hospital that has been linked to a number of other confirmed cases, the ministry said. She was reported to be in stable condition.

    The woman’s parents had also previously tested positive to MERS, the ministry said. The woman was reported to be in stable condition.

    MERS OUTBREAK DELAYS PARK’S US TRIP

    The spread of the disease has stirred up public fear and confusion, prompting President Park Geun-hye to postpone a visit to the United States, while health officials have been criticized over a lack of transparency and for failing to swiftly contain the spread.

    On Wednesday, the ministry reported two deaths from the MERS virus, bringing the number of fatalities to nine. All of those who died had been suffering serious ailments before they tested positive for the MERS virus, the ministry said.

    The outbreak, the largest outside Saudi Arabia, has fuelled public anxiety and hit spending, with thousands in quarantine and the number of schools closing rising to 2,474, including 22 universities.

    A joint South Korean-World Health Organization mission (WHO) on Wednesday recommended that schools be reopened as they were unlikely to spread the disease, just as school boards recommended more be shut.

    “Schools have not been linked to transmission of (the virus) in the Republic of Korea or elsewhere,” the mission said in a statement.

    TRAVELLERS AVOID AIRPORT DUE TO MERS SCARE 

    Airplanes, taxis and subways in South Korea are being disinfected to prevent the spread of MERS and protect passengers from transmission, as people avoided public transport in response to the outbreak of MERS.

    Seoul Metro, city-owned subway company, said on average 4,600,000 people take the subway daily but only about two million people took a subway on Sunday (Jun 7).

    Some countries around the region have issued advisories against travel to South Korea or stepped up screening of inbound passengers, dealing a setback to a tourism sector that had been a bright spot for the flagging South Korean economy.

    The main Incheon airport said the number of passenger arrivals was down sharply on Monday (Jun 8) and Tuesday.

    First identified in humans in 2012, MERS is caused by a coronavirus from the same family as the one that triggered China’s deadly 2003 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). There is no cure or vaccine.

    South Korea’s new cases bring the total number of MERS cases globally to 1,271 based on WHO data, with at least 448 related deaths. The country has the second highest number of cases after Saudi Arabia, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

    South Korea’s infections have all been traced to a man who developed MERS after returning from a trip to the Middle East in early May, and who came into contact with other patients at a hospital before being diagnosed.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • One Of Four Patients In Hong Kong Tested Negative For MERS

    One Of Four Patients In Hong Kong Tested Negative For MERS

    One of four patients admitted to hospital suspected of carrying Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers) has tested negative for the virus, hospital officials announced on Thursday.

    It was unclear whether the three remaining patients had also tested negative, with the hospital authority only saying that no confirmed case had been found so far. The authority confirmed the 22-year-old woman who sought treatment at a clinic operated by the Quality HealthCare group in the Tsing Yi MTR station had tested negative.

    The suspected cases, picked up at the city’s health centres, marked the first time the wider community may have been exposed to the deadly virus.

    All four fell ill after visiting South Korea, where an outbreak has killed nine people and infected 108.

    Until now, all of the suspected Mers cases in Hong Kong were intercepted during temperature checks at the airport.

    From noon on Tuesday to noon on Wednesday, more than 30 suspected cases were reported, but about half initially tested negative for Mers.

    Our experts have assessed that the risk of importing cases [to mainland China] has increased significantly
    MAO QUNAN, CHINESE OFFICIAL

    The cases within the community – which followed a tightening in the reporting regime – came as Chinese health authorities warned that mainland China was facing a heightened risk of the virus.

    In the first Hong Kong case on Wednesday, the 22-year-old woman who has since tested negative was rushed to Princess Margaret Hospital after seeking treatment at a clinic operated by the Quality HealthCare group in the Tsing Yi MTR station. The woman showed signs of fever and a running nose after visiting Seoul between May 23 and 27. She did not show any symptoms until she had been back in the city for almost two weeks.

    READ MORE: What Mers is, how it spreads and how to avoid it

    Three other suspected cases were reported at other Quality HealthCare medical centres on the same day. One was a young woman who visited Seoul between May 26 and 30, and sought treatment for fever and diarrhoea at the centre in Prince’s Building in Central.

    Another young woman, who was in South Korea last Friday and Saturday, had a fever and a running nose after the trip. She went to the group’s clinic in Pacific Centre, Tsim Sha Tsui, and was sent to Queen Elizabeth Hospital.

    The fourth suspected case, a middle-aged woman, visited the centre’s clinic in Tung Chung with a fever after returning from South Korea on Monday.

    Watch: New Mers deaths in South Korea brings the total to nine 

    Despite concerns about community exposure to the virus, infectious disease experts said there was no increased risk facing the city as people were more aware of precautionary measures.

    However, the initial scare spooked the stock market. The benchmark Hang Seng Index had dropped 228 points, or 0.85 per cent, by 3.05pm, with heavy selling starting at about 2.30pm when the news of the first suspected case broke.

    On mainland China, Mao Qunan, a spokesman of the National Health and Family Planning Commission in Beijing, said the country’s risk of having imported Mers cases had increased.

    Health officials in protective clothing investigate at the Tsing Yi clinic. Photo: Sam Tsang

    “Because our country has relatively frequent contact with people from South Korea and the Middle East, and especially now that South Korea has an outbreak, our experts have assessed that the risk of importing cases has increased significantly,” he said.

    The commission said on its official microblog that a Chinese citizen working at a South Korean hospital was confirmed to be infected with Mers.

    But Mao sidestepped the issue of whether Beijing would follow decisions by Taipei, Hong Kong and Macau to issue travel warnings against South Korea.

    The Tsing Yi clinic was closed as health officials investigated. Photo: Sam Tsang

    “Whether we are going to issue any ban or warning over travelling, it’s something we need to discuss with members of our tourism department,” he said.

    A 44-year-old man, who is the son of a confirmed Mers patient in South Korea, is being treated in a hospital in Huizhou in southern Guangdong province. The man travelled to Huizhou late last month via Hong Kong.

    The Southern Metropolis News reported that all 75 people who had come into close contact with the 44-year-old after he entered mainland China were about to finish their 14 days of quarantine after testing negative for the virus.

    Additional reporting by Associated Press

     

    Source: www.scmp.com