More than 680 people in South Korea are in
isolation after having contact with those infected with a virus that has killed
hundreds of people in the Middle East, health officials said Monday.
South
Korea has reported 17 cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome since a man
tested positive following a trip to Saudi Arabia and became the country's first
MERS patient earlier this month. The virus in South Korea has so far been
largely limited to those who stayed at the same hospital with the first patient
before he was diagnosed, their family members and medical staff who treated the
first patient.
AP reports:
South
Korean Health Ministry official Kwon Jun-wook told reporters Monday that 682
people who had close contact with the patients, such as their family members
and their medical staff, were isolated at their homes or state-run facilities
to prevent the spread of the disease.
Ministry
officials said the number could rise.
In
addition to the 17 cases of MERS in South Korea, the son of one of the patients
became China's first case of the virus last week after having traveled to the
country despite being told by doctors to cancel his trip.
MERS
was discovered in 2012 and has mostly been centered in Saudi Arabia. It belongs
to the family of coronaviruses that includes the common cold and SARS, and can
cause fever, breathing problems, pneumonia and kidney failure. The virus is
thought to be primarily acquired through contact with camels, but it can also
spread from human fluids and droplets.
There
have been 1,167 cases of the virus worldwide and 479 of the patients have died,
according to the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control.
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