June 2014 – SAUDIA ARABIA –
Saudi Arabia reported significantly more deaths from the MERS virus on
Tuesday, the same day the country sacked one of its top health
officials. The Saudi Ministry of Health reported that 282 people have
died since 2012 from the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus,
or MERS-CoV, a major uptick from the previous official death toll of
190. This is out of 688 total cases in the Arab nation; 353 patients
have recovered and 53 are still receiving treatment. About five weeks
ago, Saudi Arabia was reporting 339 known cases of MERS-CoV, 102 of
which had resulted in deaths. Hospitals prepare for MERS outbreak. The
new numbers came out the same day that acting Health Minister Adel bin
Mohammed Fakieh announced he had relieved Deputy Health Minister Dr.
Ziad Memish from his post, according to a statement on the health
ministry’s website. No reason was given. Last week, the World Health
Organization reported it was aware of 636 “laboratory-confirmed cases”
of MERS infections, which had led to 193 deaths. It is not immediately
clear how Saudi Arabia’s latest figures affect those numbers. There is
now a grave fear among global health watch agencies that the number of
MERS cases in Saudi Arabia is being under-reported. There are documented
cases of the virus around the world. As a coronavirus, MERS is in the
same group of illnesses as the common cold.
But it is much more lethal: The U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention notes that about 30% of those
infected have died. Those with MERS have severe acute respiratory
illness, including symptoms such as fever, cough and shortness of
breath. Some develop more dangerous complications like pneumonia and
kidney failure. There is no vaccine or special treatment. MERS is
thought to have originated on the Arabian Peninsula in 2012. No one
knows exactly where it came from, but evidence implicating camels is
emerging. In a recently published study in mBio, researchers said they
isolated live MERS virus from two single-humped camels, known as
dromedaries. They found multiple substrains in the camel viruses,
including one that perfectly matches a sub-strain isolated from a human
patient. –CNN
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks, Your Comment will appear within the next 24 hours...
Your comment is very much appreciated and helpful to our readership.
.... Morpheus