MERS claims 3 more victims but authorities see fewer new cases
AUTHORITIES in South Korea yesterday temporarily closed two hospitals amid persistent fears over the MERS virus outbreak, which has killed 13 people so far, though health officials said they are seeing fewer new infections.
More than 120 people in South Korea have been diagnosed with Middle East Respiratory Syndrome since the country reported its first case last month.
The outbreak, the largest outside Saudi Arabia, has been occurring only in hospitals, among patients, family members who visited them and medical staff treating them. Still, it has caused widespread fears and rumors, and about 2,900 schools and kindergartens remain closed.
South Korean officials have hoped the disease would begin to ease since the virus’ maximum two-week incubation period for those infected at a Seoul hospital considered as the main source of the outbreak ended yesterday.
However, several hospitals have treated MERS patients, and the later incubation periods for them is raising worries of possible new sources of infections.
Mediheal Hospital in western Seoul and Changwon SK Hospital in the southern city of Changwon were ordered to temporarily shut down after MERS patients were found to have had contact with hundreds of people there before they were diagnosed, according to officials at Seoul and Changwon.
There are currently no MERS patients at the two hospitals, but dozens of medical staff and existing patients are quarantined at the facilities. Mediheal is to reopen on June 23, and Changwon SK on June 24, city officials said.
Central government officials say there is little chance of the virus spreading from those hospitals because they are quarantining people who had contacts with infected people and monitoring them.
“We see no danger of an additional spread,” Jeong Eun-kyeong, a senior official from the Korea Center for Disease Control and Prevention, told a news conference.
She said only a small number of new infections could still be reported from those hospitals.
Some experts have said the outbreak could continue if there are a large number of infected people who evaded government quarantine measures and spread the virus.
The health ministry reported just four new cases yesterday, after registering 14 on Thursday and 13 on Wednesday.
About 3,680 people were still isolated after possible contacts with infected people, a decline from more than 3,800 on Thursday, the ministry said.
Senior ministry official Kwon Deok-cheol told the news conference that the public should stop worrying too much about the outbreak as the number of new cases had been falling.
Most of the deaths have been of people suffering from pre-existing medical conditions, such as respiratory problems or cancer, he added.
Three MERS patients in their 70s died yesterday, raising the country’s number of MERS-related deaths to 13.
All three had suffered from conditions such as pneumonia, asthma, lung diseases and high-blood pressure before they were confirmed as having MERS, officials at the health ministry told reporters.
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