Agencies/Riyadh

 

A Saudi man has died of Mers in Jeddah, where authorities have sought to calm fears over the spreading respiratory illness, the health ministry said yesterday.

The ministry said five more people were infected with the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, including two medics, all in Jeddah.

The latest death of a 52-year-old brings to 71 the total number of people to have died from Mers, out of 205 infections in Saudi Arabia, it added.

Health authorities on Tuesday reported the death of a 59-year-old, also in Jeddah, as well as four other infections in the same city, including three medics.

Last week panic over the spread of Mers among medical staff in Jeddah forced the temporary closure of an emergency room at a major hospital, prompting Health Minister Abdullah al-Rabiah to visit the facility in a bid to calm the public.

“The situation concerning the coronavirus is reassuring,” said a government statement.

Local media reported yesterday at least four doctors at Jeddah’s King Fahd hospital resigned this week after refusing to treat patients affected by Mers, apparently out of fear of catching the virus.

The Mers virus was initially concentrated in the eastern region of Saudi Arabia but has now spread across other areas.

Three new cases of Mers have been diagnosed in the UAE, the Abu Dhabi Health Authority said on Tuesday.

The cases were found during checks on associates of people previously struck by the syndrome, the authority said.

The three infected persons were all in good health and were not suffering from any symptoms of the coronavirus, which can lead to kidney failure and severe pneumonia.

The announcement came two days after Yemeni Health Minister Ahmed al-Anasi revealed that his country had identified its first case of the syndrome, in a patient hospitalised in Sanaa.

The World Health Organisation said on Friday it had been told of 212 laboratory-confirmed cases of Mers infection worldwide, of which 88 have proved fatal.

The Mers virus is considered a deadlier but less-transmissible cousin of the Sars virus that erupted in Asia in 2003 and infected 8,273 people, 9% of whom died.

Experts are still struggling to understand Mers, for which there is no known vaccine.

A recent study said the virus has been “extraordinarily common” in camels for at least 20 years, and may have been passed directly from the animals to humans.

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