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Seven new cases of MERS have been
confirmed in South Korea, bringing the total to 145, while thousand’s of people
have been quarantined. A patient in Slovakia is also being
tested, as the WHO has called for an emergency meeting to tackle the outbreak.
Four
of the new patients in South Korea confirmed on Sunday are believed to have
caught the deadly virus after coming into contact with patients at Seoul’s
Samsung Medical Centre, according to the Health and Welfare Ministry.
RT.com report continues:
Another
of the victims is believed to have contracted MERS as he drove an infected
patient to a hospital. The last two cases have been linked to two separate
medical facilities.
Over
4,000 people are currently being kept in quarantine as a precaution, after they
were in close contact with potential MERS suffers, since the first case was
confirmed on May 20.
So
far, 15 people have died in South Korea as a result of the latest MERS
outbreak.
This
week, experts from a 16-member joint mission from South Korean and World Health
Organization (WHO), warned that the outbreak is “large and
complex,” while more cases should be expected.
The
WHO is also urging those people who have possibly been exposed to the virus,
not to travel, especially during the incubation period.
Despite
the WHO warning, a man in Slovakia has been hospitalized after possibly
contracting MERS. Doctors in Bratislava are expecting to receive test results
from Prague on Sunday, after testing a 38-year-old South Korean male, a
spokeswoman said on Saturday.
Local
media claim the patient may have come into contact with the virus, while
working as a subcontractor for Kia motors, a Korean car manufacturer, at a
factory in the city of Zilina, Slovakia.
Meanwhile,
the WHO announced it will hold an emergency meeting on Tuesday to address the
outbreak. The conference will provide technical updates on epidemiology and
offer advice on future preventative actions in response to the South Korean
outbreak, the largest outside Saudi Arabia, where the disease first surfaced in
2012.
MERS comes from the same
family of viruses as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) that killed about
800 people worldwide in 2002-2003. There is currently no cure or vaccine for
the disease.
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