The MERS
virus outbreak in South Korea, first confirmed on May 20, has sparked mounting
public concern ©Ed Jones (AFP)
|
South Korea reported its seventh death on
Tuesday from Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) as the government,
concerned at the economic impact, said it hoped to halt the outbreak of the
virus by the end of the week.
Eight new
infections brought the total number of cases to 95 in the largest outbreak
outside Saudi Arabia, following the diagnosis of the first patient back on May
20.
The virus
has caused widespread public anxiety and led to a plunge in cinema ticket sales
and dwindling attendance at baseball games and other public events.
"Public
concerns are rising over the negative impact of the MERS outbreak on our
economy and society," Acting Prime Minister Choi Kyung-Hwan said during a
meeting with top health officials.
"So we
have decided to... launch an active, all-out response with the goal of ending
the MERS crisis within this week," said Choi, who is also the finance
minister.
The latest
fatality was a 68-year-old woman who was infected by a MERS patient at a
hospital in Seoul.
- Hospitals the focus -
All the
infections so far have been restricted to hospitals, and the ministry stressed
that all seven who died had pre-existing health problems.
The virus
is considered a deadlier but less infectious cousin of Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS), which killed hundreds of people when it appeared in Asia in
2003.
There is no
vaccine or cure for the virus which, according to World Health Organization
data, has a fatality rate of around 35 percent.
"People
may be concerned, but I hope that they will not overreact and cooperate to
ensure that economic activities will not be weakened," President Park
Geun-Hye told a cabinet meeting.
The
outbreak has hit the tourist industry, with more than 45,000 scheduled visitors
-- mostly Chinese -- cancelling trips to South Korea in the first week of June,
the Korea Tourism Board said.
Xiu Xin, a
Chinese tourist in Seoul, said he had decided to go ahead with his trip despite
the health scare.
- 'Not so scary' -
"I'd
heard about the virus and was a little worried. But after I got here, it wasn't
so scary," Xiu told AFP.
"I'm
just wearing this to feel better," he added, pointing to the surgical mask
on his face.
The eight
new cases reported Tuesday were well down on the 23 fresh infections announced
the day before, but experts said it was premature to talk about a declining
trend.
"This
week will be a crucial period," the health ministry said, adding that
three people had been discharged from hospital after fully recovering from the
disease.
Almost
2,900 people have been placed under quarantine -- most of them in their own
homes -- and nearly 2,200 schools have been closed down despite no evidence of
any infection outside hospital facilities.
Questions
have also been raised over the World Student Games, due to be held in the
southern city of Gwangju next month.
But organizers
of the Universiade said no country had withdrawn and the event's medical team
put out a statement stressing that preparations were proceeding normally.
"The MERS outbreak
which has been quite limited will not have any effect on the Games," the
statement said.
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