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Thursday, May 22, 2014

Special Report : Saudi Arabia takes heat for spread of MERS virus

LONDON Thu May 22, 2014 1:50am EDT

1 of 3. A man wearing a mask poses with camels at a camel market in the village of al-Thamama near Riyadh in this May 11, 2014 file photo.
Credit: Reuters/Faisal Nasser/Files
(Reuters) - In a north London laboratory on a Saturday in September 2012, an email arrived from a team of virologists in the Netherlands that spooked even some of the world's most seasoned virus handlers.
It contained details of a mysterious viral pathogen that had been found in two patients - a Qatari in intensive care in Britain, and a Saudi who died in a Jeddah hospital of pneumonia and renal failure.
This information-sharing between world-leading specialists proved fruitful: Within days the new virus had been identified as one never seen before in humans, had some of its genes sequenced, and its genetic ancestry published online for scientists around the world to see.
Yet that international collaboration was not to last.
Instead, Western scientists allege, the cooperation gave way to a Saudi culture of suspicion and stubbornness that has allowed the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) virus, as it has become known, to kill more than 175 people in Saudi Arabia, spread throughout the region and reach as far as Malaysia, Greece, Lebanon and - via Britain - the United States.
The disease, like its cousin Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), causes coughing, fever and sometimes fatal pneumonia. More than 650 people worldwide have been infected with it, and MERS is reaching new victims every day in the Saudi kingdom, killing around 30 percent of them.
Experts say these infections and deaths could have been stopped well within the two years since MERS first emerged - and would have been if Saudi authorities had been more open to outside help offered by specialist teams around the world with the technology, know-how and will to conduct vital scientific studies.
But according to scientists involved in tracking MERS over the past two years, the Saudis have rejected repeated offers of help - including from World Health Organisation (WHO) experts, as well as the Dutch specialists at the Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam and the London team working for Public Health England (PHE).
In Saudi Arabia, no case-control study has been completed, meaning fundamental questions cannot be answered about the virus' capabilities, where it came from, and what it might do next.
"It's really a tragedy for these people who get sick," said David Heymann, a professor of infectious disease epidemiology, chairman of PHE and head of global health security at Britain's Royal Institute of International Affairs.
"It's just so frustrating not to know how people are getting infected and to see people continue to get infected and die from a virus which maybe they wouldn't have to get if we knew more."
Saudi Deputy Health Minister Ziad Memish told Reuters he was "surprised" by such criticisms, describing work done by his Ministry of Health since the emergence of the disease as "nothing but collaborative." He pointed out that scientists still struggle to understand other deadly viruses decades after they were first identified, and questioned the motives of some critics.
"I'm happy" with the way the Saudi authorities have handled this virus outbreak, "and will continue to involve more partners to make knowing the details of the virus a global success," he said in an email.
SO LONG, SO LITTLE KNOWLEDGE
Scientists say what stands out about the MERS virus is just how little the world knows about it, even though for almost two years it has been viewed as one of the top potential pandemic threats by a global network of specialists who keep tabs on all emerging viruses.
Primary responsibility for the response lies with the Saudi Ministry of Health, which under international health regulations reports to the WHO on MERS cases.
The ministry has from the start worked intermittently with various global agencies and institutions, including the WHO, the U.S. Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, the University of Columbia and Ecohealth Alliance. Some of them have expressed frustration about Saudi authorities' apparent lack of urgency. The WHO, for example, has conducted several scientific missions to the Middle East, primarily to provide support for Saudi Arabia and its neighbors to start the research needed to get on top of the outbreak. Yet much of this work remains undone.
So far, much evidence points to camels as a possible infection source - with the virus staging a so-called zoonotic event by jumping from animals to people. But scientists still have no idea how people are getting infected, whether by eating camel meat, or drinking the milk, touching blood or other body fluids, or simply being nearby when they cough or sneeze.
There is also no good data on how many people may be catching the virus but showing no or few symptoms, or how to successfully treat patients who get sick with MERS.
"There is so much missing in our knowledge of this infection after 20 months - whether it be the epidemiology, the transmission routes, the virology, or behavioral change," said Jeremy Farrar, an infectious disease specialist and director of the Wellcome Trust international charity.
The Saudis have been offered a lot of help, he said, but "they are not open to it."
"The world is very lucky this virus seems to be stable and doesn't seem to be changing, but 20 months in to the emergence of a new virus, just imagine if it had been another SARS."
Comparisons with SARS have dogged the MERS coronavirus since it first surfaced - not only because the two viruses belong to the same family but also because they cause similar symptoms.
There is one key difference: SARS in 2003 was more dangerous than MERS is now, not because it has a higher fatality rate - the SARS death toll was lower at around 10 percent - but because it spread more easily from person to person.
LIKE SARS, IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE
When SARS hit global headlines in 2003, it had already been circulating unchecked in China for several months. It fell below the radar of the WHO, which was kept in the dark by secretive Chinese officials.
When Beijing did come clean, Public Health England's Heymann, who back then was chief of the WHO's infectious disease section, says public chastising of China, coupled with intensive daily collaboration between specialists, helped bring the outbreak to an end within months. The disease killed almost 800 people worldwide.
"There were three virtual groups - laboratory people, clinicians and epidemiologists - who networked daily by phone and email, working together to solve the problem," Heymann said.
Saudi suspicions about working with teams of researchers outside the kingdom - and the Deputy Minister's desire to stay in control - may have been prompted by precisely the information-sharing that characterized the virus's first few days, interviews with key scientists and public health officials involved in tracking MERS since 2012 suggest. Memish did not respond to that suggestion.
Ali Mohamed Zaki, an Egyptian microbiologist working at the Dr Soliman Fakeeh Hospital in Jeddah, found and reported the first MERS patient by posting lab results on an international scientific website. Zaki was sacked within a week of going public about the new virus. He has since returned to his native Egypt and now works at the faculty of medicine at Cairo's Ain Shams University.
"I lost my job because of this discovery," he told Reuters. No-one at the Jeddah hospital could be contacted for comment.
The fact the Dutch team with whom Zaki had first communicated took out a patent on the newly identified virus seems also to have rankled. In an email to Reuters, Deputy Health Minister Memish described that move as being driven by a "financial agenda."
Ab Osterhaus, who heads the virology department at the Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam, said patenting the virus was the "normal thing to do" in such a situation, and said his lab freely shared details of the virus with everyone and anyone who wants to conduct research.
There are few patents on viruses, largely because most of them were discovered many years ago. But research institutes often take out patents, at the same time as sharing a virus freely, as a way of encouraging future interest from industry in developing vaccines or other drugs.
"We've always been very open with everything," Osterhaus said.
"Somebody should be doing the epidemiological work in Saudi, and we have all the techniques operational today to be involved in those kinds of studies, so we'd be happy to collaborate. We have offered our services to Memish, but apparently we are not the obvious candidates to help."
Others who worked with Saudi scientists at the very beginning of the outbreak, when MERS had not even been named and was only just starting to be investigated, say Saudi authorities - and Memish in particular - wanted an increasing level of control.
Ian Lipkin, a virologist at New York's Columbia University, was among the first to establish a link between the MERS virus and camels. Lipkin told Reuters that he initially worked with Memish, but the two fell out. "I haven't worked with him in six months. We no longer work together at all," he said.
Lipkin declined to give details, saying only: "We're just not in agreement on many things."
A specialist in infectious diseases, Memish has served on advisory committees for the WHO, and published more than 180 papers in the past decade - several in high-impact journals such as The Lancet and The New England Journal of Medicine, according to an analysis by ThomsonReuters IP & Science unit. This volume of work is indicative of a fairly prolific research scientist, but not out of the ordinary.
Zaki said Memish was "very angry" to hear he was to publish a paper along with Osterhaus's team in the New England Journal of Medicine on the discovery of the MERS virus. "He (Memish) wanted to have the whole story for himself," Zaki said.
And asked whether he, as discoverer of the virus, has since been able to work from Egypt with Saudi scientists to investigate it in more detail, Zaki added: "No no, not at all."
Memish says he'd be happy to work with Lipkin in the future "if his services will be needed and (would) not duplicate our work with other partners." He did not respond to questions about whether he was trying to claim credit for every MERS investigation.
Memish's boss was replaced as Saudi Health Minister just as MERS appeared to be gathering pace. His replacement, Labour Minister Adel Fakieh, was not available for interview with Reuters. His appointment was seen by commentators as an attempt by the government to be seen taking MERS more seriously.
CRITICAL GAPS
As the frustration over the response emerges, big questions about the deadly virus remain.
Keiji Fukuda, the WHO's head of health security, has been careful not to directly criticize Saudi authorities. But in a media briefing on May 14, he described progress as slow and admitted that despite repeated calls from the WHO, crucial research has not yet been done.
"There are critical gaps in information," Fukuda said. He noted in particular the continuing lack of a case-control study - an essential starting point for determining where a new disease is coming from, who it is infecting, and how. "In principle, everybody accepts that the studies are important to do, and that they may yield some of the critical information that is wanted, but ... it has been slow."
In July 2013, he also said the WHO had "conducted a number of missions in the Middle East, primarily to provide support to assess what is the situation, (and) what investigations should be done."
Memish defends his country's actions and says he has collaborated widely. He points to other infectious viral diseases, such as Ebola, which has caused sporadic but deadly outbreaks in Africa since it was first identified 40 years ago and about which scientists still have limited knowledge.
"All these collaborations have answered many questions but of course (there) still remain some to be answered," he said. "Look at Ebola, which has been around for many years, and tell me ... do we have all the answers on source, mode of transmission from zoonotic source and treatment or vaccine prevention?"
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/05/22/us-saudi-mers-specialreport-idUSBREA4L03D20140522 

Global MERS death toll passes 200-mark

• Filipino nurse in Jeddah among latest fatality

JEDDAH: The world’s total death toll from the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) coronavirus has passed the 200-mark and is still going up.
As of Thursday, the cumulative global number of MERS infections since September 2012 was 661, of which 205 patients have died, data compiled from reports of the Saudi Health Ministry and the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control showed.
Saudi Arabia bore the brunt of the outbreak, with the Health Ministry's count on May 23, 2014 standing at 551 cases, including 177 deaths.
A statement posted by the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control on its website on Thursday said that as of May 20, the cumulative number of infections in all countries other than Saudi Arabia stood at 110, with 28 deaths.
Topping the list was the United Arab Emirates with 67 cases and 9 deaths, followed by Jordan with 9 cases and 4 deaths, and Qatar with 7 cases and 4 deaths.
Rounding up the Middle East countries with MERS cases were Oman had 2 cases, 2 deaths; Kuwait, 3 cases/1 death; Egypt: 1 case/0 deaths; Yemen: 1 case/1 death and Lebanon: 1 case/0 deaths.
In Europe, UK led with 4 cases/3 deaths, followed by Germany: 2 cases/1 death; France, 2 cases/1 death; Italy, 1 case/0 deaths; Greece, 1 case/0 deaths; and the Netherlands, 2 cases/0 deaths.
Africa had 3 cases/1 death, all in Tunisia.
The Americas had two cases, all in the United States.
In Asia, Malaysia reported 1 death and Philippines had 1 infection.
While the Philippines had only one case of infection, a number of Filipino workers in the Middle East were reported to have been among the victims, including two nurses who have died in Saudi Arabia and one in the United Arab Emirates  http://www.arabnews.com/news/575521

MERS-CoV enigma deepens as reported cases surge

The Lancet, Volume 383, Issue 9931, Page 1793, 24 May 2014
doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60866-7Cite or Link Using DOI
Experts are puzzled by an explosion of new cases of MERS-CoV, as a WHO committee raises concerns over the handling of the outbreak. David Holmes reports.
Researchers are struggling to explain a rapid rise in reported infections with Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV). As of May 16, the number of laboratory confirmed cases globally had climbed to 614, with 181 deaths. 418 of those cases have been reported in the past 2 months, mostly in Saudi Arabia.
After it was first identified in Saudi Arabia in 2012, MERS infections have been reported throughout the Arabian peninsula and exported to at least ten other countries. Most confirmed cases of MERS-CoV infection have developed severe acute respiratory illness, but the virus also often causes kidney and other organ failure. The mortality rate is around 30%, and there is currently no vaccine or specific treatment available.
While stopping short of proclaiming the outbreak an international public health emergency, the WHO Emergency Committee on MERS-CoV announced on May 14 that its concern over the situation had “significantly increased”, with particular worries over recent evidence that the infection is spreading in hospitals, and apparent “gaps in critical information”.
One of the most crucial gaps is our lack of understanding of where the virus comes from, says Marion Koopmans, of the Netherlands National Institute of Public Health. So far, studies have more or less ruled out sheep, cattle, goats, and poultry as a source, but dromedary camels throughout the Arabian peninsula and in parts of North and East Africa have been shown to carry the virus. However, it is still too early to say definitively that they are the main source of primary infections in humans, says Koopmans. “I am convinced that people and dromedary camels share the same viruses, but how exactly this happens we do not know”, she explains. “Camels shed virus from their nose, and sometimes in stool, which is dropped and may cause environmental contamination. Younger animals seem to be virus-positive more often than adult animals, so combined, the best bet would be to look for exposures (direct or indirect) to young camels as the highest risk factor.”
As young camels lose their maternal immunity they become more susceptible to MERS-CoV infection, and the fact that the latest surge in cases corresponds with similar smaller spikes throughout April and May in 2012 and 2013 in Jordan and Saudi Arabia also suggests that the breeding season could be a factor. However, a seasonal increase in exposure to young camels alone doesn't seem a sufficient explanation, according to Ziad Memish, Saudia Arabia's Deputy Minister for Public Health and professor in the College of Medicine at Alfaisal University in the capital Riyadh. “More than two-thirds of the primary human cases have no links to camels”, he notes. One possibility is that another species is acting as an intermediary. Bats have been touted as a possible source after a bat of the Taphozous genus was found to harbour a fragment of the MERS sequence, but contacts between bats and people are so rare that it “would seem an unlikely explanation”, says Koopmans. Another zoonotic infection, Nipah virus, has been shown to stem from the consumption of date palm sap contaminated by infected fruit bats, but Christian Dorsten, a virologist at the University of Bonn, Germany, who is working with local researchers in Saudi Arabia, says talk of a similar link between bats and MERS is far-fetched. “There are several aspects in recent hypotheses around MERS and bats that make no biological sense at all. For example, it is not true that Taphozous feeds on dates from which the virus could be acquired. Taphozous is insectivorous”, he says.
Another possible explanation for the recent surge in cases is that the virus has acquired mutations enabling it to be transmitted more easily between people, but again, Dorsten notes, the facts tell a different story. Many of the recent cases occurred in the port city of Jeddah, and sequences taken of the Jeddah viruses show no hints of any relevant genetic changes says Dorsten. The Jeddah viruses do, however, seem to be a different strain from those causing infections elsewhere in the country, and are probably linked to a hospital-associated outbreak, according to Dorsten. “Without having seen epidemiological data, I predict that most cases detected in Jeddah will be linked quite directly to the outbreak in King Fahd Hospital from where it spread to other hospitals”, he says.
The prevention of future outbreaks will hinge on countering the “surprising lack of information about how this virus is transmitted from animals to humans”, says Maria Van Kerkhove, liaison between WHO and the UK MRC Centre for Outbreak Analysis and Modelling, Imperial College London. “Basic epidemiologic studies have still not been done to evaluate risk factors for infection”, she says. “We know that infection control and prevention works to stop human-to-human transmission, but without stopping transmission from camels, we will continue to see more cases in the Middle East, some of whom will travel outside of the region.”
For more on MERS-CoV in health workers see CommentLancet 2014; published online May 20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60852-7

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Livestock Association in Riyadh demanding « Health» refrain from statements Batin free « Corona » and attempts to whitewash the camels of « virus »


Today - Riyadh , Manis Shehhi - Batin 05/21/2014 - 03:00:00
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The Director of the King Khaled Hospital General drilled sub ​​Dr Khader Zafiri he has been the adoption of the hospital as a center for diseases Corona , adding Zafiri he was put department within the hospital helping accident cases that are suspected of being affected by the disease , has been the creation of the section with all the equipment and allocated to the department just as the existence of air secluded from the rest of the hospital X-Ray , as well as private and special cadre , has been organizing their working hours and assuming the cases , with an emphasis on the application of infection control within the hospital strictly .
And cases of Corona was recorded drilled sub ​​recently and what is going on about the existence of Mnomin hospital denied Zafiri there is no case of sleeping at the hospital at all , and that the only case in which I checked the hospital was getting out was from Jeddah and went to his home , and he has a follow-up and attention to preventive medicine of the Directorate of Health Affairs Bhfralebatn .On the other hand , called the Cooperative Association for livestock in Riyadh and the Ministries of Health and Agriculture to form a team of specialized researchers in the field of viruses and diseases common to humans and animals to stand on the prairie barns and markets camel breeders and shepherds for the analysis of blood and see how the existence of such a virus among camels and humans and whether the virus moved from camels to humans or vice versa , it might be a virus beauty is not transmitted to humans as in pets like cats in America .


The Assembly demanded in a statement on behalf of the President of the Council of the Cooperative Association for livestock in Riyadh , Dr. Saleh bin Abdulrahman bin Saleh Al Shraideh , the Ministry of Health to prove the number of the deceased and their careers and their business are they in contact camel ? Is the origin of the virus is the camel ? Does the Ministry of Agriculture deaths and one death due to the virus camels or not?

 It pointed out in the statement that she had seen what was issued by the Ministry of Health and Ministry of Agriculture about the accusations directed towards economic wealth taken root depths of the Arabian Peninsula from the long-standing but has been associated with male camels Sahara and its role in the development of local communities and the accusation of camels as a source of virus Corona without carrying out research studies and scientific the laboratory itself on camels and shepherds and educators and is one of her contacts Almjavih facts of reality and leading to interpretations and speculations and opinions that have many negative on the homeland and the citizen .

The Assembly called on the Ministries of Health and Agriculture to stop the permits until the end of the committee formed to prepare the necessary reports , realism and real , due to the lack of successful treatment cures the disease Assembly considers activating the role of preventive and awareness through the media and various liquid . Confirmed its strong commitment to the security and safety of the community through field work and standing with the right support and everything in his power to preserve this heritage of economic and human safety and health. http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.alyaum.com%2FNews%2F

Minister of Health: containment «Corona» a top priority for the ministry

Tuesday 2014/05/20

Health Minister-designate Adel Faqih
Jeddah - SPA:
Health Minister-designate Adel Faqih that contain the Corona virus that causes respiratory syndrome Middle East comes on top of the priorities of the Ministry of Health.
This came during his speech at the meeting of Ministers of Health of the Middle East countries on the sidelines of the meeting of officials and leaders of the World Health within the framework of the sixty-seventh meeting of the World Health Assembly in Geneva today.
Said Fakih: "The containment of the virus which is what we are working with our partners from international organizations and institutions as well as experts of research and medicine from inside and outside the Kingdom, we also coordinate daily with the World Health Organization to ensure that the exchange of the latest results, information and best practices with all parties concerned with these international efforts ".
He added that the main priorities in the Kingdom is the prevention of infection, where the ministry to establish a center of operations to be the main supporter of the ministry's efforts, in addition to the formation of a medical team for the quick response, and the development of protocols and guidelines updated to prevent infection and control, and to require all health care facilities in the Kingdom to apply strictly .  http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.alriyadh.com%2Fnews

Confirmed the absence of a recommendation "universal" examines the pilgrims

OH YEAH ..I have something to say about this...

Tuesday 2014/05/20

Confirmed the absence of a recommendation "universal" examines the pilgrims

Deputy Minister of Health: Corona entered a phase of stability

Mohammed Khchim
Riyadh - the earliest Sharif (Photo - Abdullatif Al-Hamdan):
Said Deputy Health Minister for Planning and Development, Dr. Mohammed Khchim for "Riyadh" The spread of disease in the Kingdom of Corona entered a phase of stability, while stressing that the ministry is not considering placing the detectors for travelers, whether they are departures or arrivals.
He Khchim for "Riyadh": "There is no recommendation from the World Health Organization examines the pilgrims coming to the Kingdom, and leave the Kingdom does not need it, until the days of swine flu was on with the same context, it was forced Kingdom on early screening, the traveler patient this is another is also subject to examination, but the ordinary traveler difficult examined do not think about it, and we are far from the pandemic. "
And the status of the disease now said Khchim: "put the virus now fixed and you can say that there are signs of improvement, in the sense that there is no increase in cases, and this thing is encouraging now, but do not want to anticipate the event, and we are now very cautious so as not to loosen any of the working groups , and we want the doctors and nurses and practitioners to take full care of, and we continue to do that until we finish them. "
He added: "We have complete information about the disease, and the minister Adel Al Faqih supported the principle of transparency, based on which we give information to the World Health Organization and health companies own that provided from the outside, and let's make a difference many foreign to see specific health status in the Kingdom."
He added: "We are with the World Health Organization in contact permanently, and there were things they advised us out Fmlnaha, and they agreed to 99 per cent of what Nfznah in this regard, and if perhaps they would like to keep awareness of a certain class of people, we welcome them, and for the information of this interest bring in experts, and had a new experience or new information is welcome. "
 
On the other hand, continued for the second day in a row, "Exhibition and Conference Saudi health in 2014," the largest international exhibition for health care in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, who hosted "Riyadh International Convention and Exhibition Centre" until 21 May, with the participation of over 300 exhibitors from 35 countries from around the world to highlight the current developments and future prospects and promising opportunities available within the Saudi healthcare sector, and highlights the importance of the health care sector in the Kingdom through the products and services that are displayed in the exhibition and conference Saudi health in 2014.

Iqbal on the show

CDC Travel Notice

MERS in the Arabian Peninsula

Warning - Level 3, Avoid Nonessential Travel
Alert - Level 2, Practice Enhanced Precautions
Watch - Level 1, Practice Usual Precautions
UpdatedMay 19, 2014

What is the Current Situation?

Countries in or near the Arabian Peninsula

MERS map
Cases of MERS (Middle East Respiratory Syndrome) have been identified in multiple countries in the Arabian Peninsula. There have also been cases in several other countries in travelers who have been to the Arabian Peninsula and, in some instances, their close contacts. Two cases have been confirmed in two health care workers living in Saudi Arabia who were visiting the United States. For more information, see CDC’s MERS website.
If you are traveling to countries in or near the Arabian Peninsula,* CDC recommends that you pay attention to your health during and after your trip. You should call a doctor right away if you develop fever and symptoms of lower respiratory illness, such as cough or shortness of breath, within 14 days after traveling from countries in or near the Arabian Peninsula. Tell the doctor about your recent travel.
CDC does not recommend that travelers change their plans because of MERS. Most instances of person-to-person spread have occurred in health care workers and other close contacts (such as family members and caregivers) of people sick with MERS. If you are concerned about MERS, you should discuss your travel plans with your doctor.

Special advice for people traveling to the Arabian Peninsula to work in health care settings

If you are traveling to provide health care services in the Arabian Peninsula, please review CDC’s recommendations for infection control of confirmed or suspected MERS cases. CDC recommends that you practice these precautions and monitor your health closely.... http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/alert/coronavirus-arabian-peninsula-uk

Canada Travel Health Notice

Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV)

Updated: May 15, 2014

Travel Health Notice

Since April 2012, cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) have been identified in the following countries in the Middle East: Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Kuwait and most recently Yemen and Lebanon.
Cases linked to travel in the Middle East have also been reported in several other countries: France, Italy, Tunisia, the United Kingdom and most recently, in Egypt, Malaysia, Greece, the United States, the Philippines and the Netherlands.
There is growing evidence that direct or indirect contact with camels play a significant role in the virus transmission. Some of the infections have occurred in clusters between individuals in close contact with one another (e.g. within the same household) and an increasing number of infections have occurred among health care workers in health care settings, indicating the importance of following strict infection control practices. This suggests that the virus can spread between humans, however, there has been no sustained person-to-person transmission and the risk of contracting this infection is still considered to be low.... http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/tmp-pmv/notices-avis/notices-avis-eng.php?id=108

Australian MERS travel bulletin

Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV)

Latest update

This Bulletin was last issued on Friday, 16 May 2014.  
There is ongoing concern about the outbreak of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV), which was first reported by the World Health Organization (WHO) in September 2012. Cases of MERS-CoV have been reported in several countries of the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and the United Arab Emirates.
Other countries outside the Middle East have also reported imported cases from returned travellers. All cases have either lived in or travelled to the Middle East, or had close contact with travellers returning from these areas. There have been no cases in Australia to date.

What are the symptoms and who is at risk?

MERS-CoV can cause a rapid onset of severe respiratory illness with a fatality rate of around 40%. There is no vaccine for MERS-CoV. Symptoms include fever, cough, shortness of breath and breathing difficulties. Some patients have reported a variety of other symptoms, including muscle pain, diarrhoea, vomiting and nausea. Some patients have mild symptoms or are asymptomatic. Severe cases have most frequently occurred in people with underlying conditions that may have made them more susceptible to infection (including diabetes, kidney disease, hypertension, asthma and lung diseases, cancer, cardiovascular disease).

Reducing the risk of exposure

Dromedary camels are suspected to be the source of infection for sporadic cases, but the exact routes of direct or indirect exposure remain unknown. Person-to-person transmission has been documented, particularly in healthcare settings.
The WHO advises that people at potentially higher risk of severe disease due to MERS-CoV should take appropriate precautions when visiting farms, barn areas or market environments where camels are present in MERS-affected countries. Appropriate precautions might include avoiding contact with camels, good hand hygiene, and avoiding drinking raw milk or eating food that may be contaminated with animal secretions or products unless they are properly washed, peeled or cooked.
All travellers should adhere to general hygiene measures, such as regular hand washing before and after touching animals, avoiding contact with sick animals, and following food hygiene practices when visiting a farm of barn in MER-CoV affected countries.
Seek immediate medical attention if you feel unwell with symptoms similar to MERS-CoV infection while travelling or on your return to Australia. Be sure to tell your healthcare provider that you have travelled to a region where MERS-CoV is known to occur. Avoid close contact with people who are ill with these symptoms.

Healthcare workers

Many confirmed cases have occurred in healthcare workers. The particular conditions or procedures that lead to transmission in hospital are not well known. However, lapses in infection control are known to be important in increasing the risk of infection in healthcare workers. Therefore, the WHO emphasises the importance of infection control strategies and practices in healthcare in affected countries, not only when caring for suspected MERS-CoV patients but also when caring for patients in all circumstances. See the Australian Department of Health website for information about infection control measures for healthcare workers.

More information

For more information about MERS-CoV, see the following websites:

Two healthy Greene County residents tested for MERS

Two Greene County residents are awaiting test results for the MERS virus that they possibly were exposed to on a flight to Orlando, a top Greene County health official said today.
Kendra Findley, the administrator of community health and epidemiology, said the two had voluntary blood tests as part of a nationwide effort by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to test everyone who was on the flight to Orlando which originated in Saudi Arabia.
"Neither one had symptoms at all so I'm fairly confident that the test results will come back negative," Findley said... http://www.news-leader.com/story/news/local/ozarks/2014/05/20/two-healthy-greene-county-residents-tested-mers/2275032/

Najran infected .. "Corona" treated at home under the supervision of "preventive medicine"

 05/21/2014
123 0
At the time that the interaction of the Mtabau social networking sites with news of grace King Khaled Hospital in Najran exit infected with Corona, which was published by the "home" yesterday, asking them to prevent the output infected only after making sure of their recovery, to protect society from the risk of infection. Confirmed that an advisory group of patients Corona is isolated and treated at home under the supervision of Preventive Medicine.
Says the head of departments esoteric and consultant of infectious diseases in Aseer Hospital Dr. Tariq Alozarka for "home," that "the people infected with Corona, and do not exhibit symptoms of the disease are a danger to others while mingling with them, despite the fact that the presence of the virus in their bodies at this stage weak somewhat, but the transmission of infection to others and Ward, although it few, while in contrast, infected with the virus who show symptoms - a high temperature, and was nominated, and nausea - are more dangerous, because the virus in their bodies reached the peak, and breed in large numbers. "
 
He added that "there are actions to take in all the hospitals in the case has been detected on one of the reviewers, and he showed symptoms of" Corona ", where it is certain actions begin to take the swab nasal and annular, and the isolation of the patient by Tnoima in a private room not by others, and ask him to put a muzzle on the nose, and follow the procedures for prevention, as well as giving antibiotics that contribute to the relief of symptoms. "
 
And Dr Alozarka that "there are two kinds of people: First, show signs of a simple show of infection, there are Tnoimam Oazlhm, and taken him to swab the nasal and ringed, and allows him to get out, and ask him to insulation in the house, until the advent of the result, if confirmed infected with the virus, relay in his home by a team of preventive medicine costly health affairs by both his area, the second type: Pkorona infected with chronic diseases, and proving injury after examination, and these are their detention and isolation in the hospital for follow-up treatment. "
 
And the possibility of injury to the patient with the virus again after his recovery, said consultant infectious diseases and internal medicine at King Faisal Specialist Hospital, Dr. Hale Abdali, said that "those who have recovered from Coruna would not be safe from injury again, although this possibility is weak.
, The Ministry of Health announced yesterday recording three new infections and Ofatyn, explained a ministry statement that the injured one in Riyadh and the other in Medina, and the third in Taif, The Deceased And one in Riyadh and another in Jeddah, bringing the number of people living to 540 and deaths to 175.
For his part, the minister of health in charge of Engineer Adel bin Mohammed Faqih yesterday a speech to a meeting of ministers from health in the countries of the Middle East, in Geneva, in which he spoke about the efforts and initiatives that have been undertaken in the UK to combat the virus Coruna, said: "The containment of the virus Corona comes a top priority for the Ministry of Health, which is what we are working with our partners from international organizations and institutions, as well as research and medicine experts from within and outside the Kingdom, as we daily coordination with the World Health Organization to ensure that the exchange of the latest results and information.
On the other hand, began monitoring the health center in Jeddah Islamic Port yesterday, to implement its program of health awareness and provided to pilgrims and visitors from various countries across the outlet port.
The director stressed "the health of Jeddah," Dr. Sami Badawoud during the opening program on the need to educate the pilgrims of pilgrims and visitors to the House of God coming through the port of Jeddah Islamic Port and port King Abdulaziz International Airport and how to protect themselves and their companions from the disease. http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fakhbaar24.argaam.com%2Farticle%2Fdetail%2F175092%2F%25d9%2586%25d8%25ac%25d8%25b1%25d8%25a7%25d9%2586-%25d9%2585%25d8%25b5%25d8%25a7%25d8%25a8-%25d9%2583%25d9%2588%25d8%25b1%25d9%2588%25d9%2586%25d8%25a7-%25d9%258a%25d8%25b9%25d8%25a7%25d9%2584%25d8%25ac-%25d9%2581%25d9%258a-%25d8%25a7%25d9%2584%25d9%2585%25d9%2586%25d8%25b2%25d9%2584-%25d8%25a8%25d8%25a5%25d8%25b4%25d8%25b1%25d8%25a7%25d9%2581-%25d8%25a7%25d9%2584%25d8%25b7%25d8%25a8-%25d8%25a7%25d9%2584%25d9%2588%25d9%2582%25d8%25a7%25d8%25a6%25d9%258a

Monday, May 19, 2014

Coronavirus patient discharged at his own risk


NAJRAN: Arab News
Published — Tuesday 20 May 2014
 Najran’s Health Affairs caused controversy among local residents when it allowed a coronavirus patient to be discharged from King Khalid Hospital.
Saleh Al-Munis, Najran’s Health Affairs director, said in a statement that the patient, a 65-year-old man, was in stable condition and left the hospital after claiming he had an appointment at King Fahad Medical City.

Muhsin Al-Rabian, Health Affairs spokesman, confirmed that the patient was stable when he left the hospital.
The debate about whether the coronavirus is transmissible from human to human or from camels is still going on.
Investigations were conducted after 23 camels recently died in Hail. The Agriculture Ministry had ascertained their cause of death to be due to poison and not the coronavirus.
Salman Al-Sweineh, Hail Agricultural Affairs director, said a team of vets had been formed to take samples from the cadavers and the fodder used to feed the animals.
The owner is being questioned over the incident.
Jordan, Egypt, Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates, the United States, Canada and Holland have recently registered coronavirus cases. Most of the patients diagnosed in these countries had recently traveled from the Kingdom.
The World Health Organization (WHO) recently announced that the coronavirus is not considered a global emergency due to lack of sufficient knowledge about its origins and mode of transmission. http://www.arabnews.com/news/573666

The delegation is headed by the Minister of Health for the State of the General Assembly of the World Health in Geneva



Date Published: Tuesday, May 20th, 2014
Attended by His Excellency Abdul Rahman bin Mohammed Al Owais, Minister of Health at the head of delegation of the State, at the opening of the sixty-seventh session of the General Assembly for Global Health, which began yesterday and will continue until next Saturday, at the headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, in the presence of more than one hundred and fifty Minister of Health from various countries around the world.
And will examine the Assembly updates global health challenges, topped by a virus Corona, as well as file strengthen preparedness for influenza pandemic and sharing of influenza viruses and access to vaccines and to intensify efforts of the Global Initiative for polio eradication and drug resistance of antimicrobials, as well as file repair the World Health Organization.
She will also discuss the global strategy for the health sector on HIV infection and AIDS in the period from 2011 to 2015, as well as the draft strategy to accelerate progress towards achieving the goals and objectives of international development, youth and health risks, and the issue of the impact of climate change on health.
The General Assembly review the subject of health systems and strategy, and plan of action on public health, innovation and intellectual property, and transplant human organs and tissues and also the WHO strategy on health research in addition to the response to the World Health Organization and its role as the leader of a group of health in the field to meet the demands of health growing in cases humanitarian emergencies.
On the other hand, co-Minister of Health yesterday also at the meeting of the Council of Arab Health Ministers, which was held on the sidelines of the General Assembly of the global health and research health conditions in the occupied Palestinian territory, including East Jerusalem and the occupied Syrian Golan, as well as the coordination of Arab positions in the General Assembly, In addition to the review of the consolidated word of the Council of Arab Ministers of Health to the General Assembly, as well as preparations for the Arab summit, economic and social development to be held in Tunis in 2015. (Geneva - WAM) http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.alittihad.ae%2Fdetails.php%3Fid%3D44743%26y%3D2014

Filipino expats not obliged to take MERS tests: Embassy

RIYADH: Rodolfo C. Estimo Jr.
Published — Tuesday 20 May 2014
The Philippine Embassy issued a statement on Monday clarifying that Filipino expatriates residing in the Kingdom are not obliged to undergo MERS-CoV testing.
“The embassy has advised health workers, like nurses, to take the test because they are exposed to patients suffering from corona virus,” an embassy official explained.
“Those wishing to take the test as a precautionary measure should go to the King Saud bin Abdulaziz Medical Complex, or Al-Shumaisi Hospital,” read the statement.
The embassy’s advisory noted that Filipinos who choose not to take the test before leaving the Kingdom, will undergo scanning upon arrival at airports in the Philippines.
It also cautioned individuals that the symptoms of the virus take 13-14 days to appear and include fever, coughing, shortness of breath and in some instances diarrhea.
Earlier, the embassy announced that one of the three nurses diagnosed with the virus had recovered after receiving treatment at King Fahd Medical City.
Doctors have advised residents and citizens to wash their hands regularly, eat and sleep well and avoid camel products.
Heeding warnings and advisories from concerned authorities, many city residents including Filipinos have been wearing facemasks. http://www.arabnews.com/news/573656

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Deadly MERS May Be Easier to Transmit Than Previously Thought

http://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/deadly-mers-may-be-easier-transmit-previously-thought-n108666

Saudi Schools allowed early summer break

Schools allowed early summer break


The school summer vacation will start from 3/8/1435H, corresponding to June 1, according to a circular issued by the Ministry of Education to all schools. Khaled Al-Ghamdi of the ministry said the schools can announce summer vacation for students from June 1. Earlier the ministry circular had said that the summer vacation will start from June 19.
Many international and Saudi schools started their final exams on Sunday, especially for kindergarten, so as to complete the current session by May end or first week of June.
School authorities came under tremendous pressure from parents and teachers to close the schools early because of MERS coronavirus scare. But the ministry didn’t relent and ordered them to create a special room with equipment and doctors to meet the CoV threat.
The schools are conducting annual exams according to their academic schedule for small children but some said that they started the exams for all the grades to finish it at once.
“We started exams of kindergarten (KG) and grades 1 to 3 according to our academic schedule and instruction of the ministry to finish them on time, as now its examination time for all schools, and many of the international schools started their exams for lower grades as well as higher grades today,” said Sadia Kalim, principal of Al Hukma International Schoo.
She said that their academic year will end in the first week of June as per their earlier plan.
Hera Talib, a parent, told Arab News that Wadi International School also started exams for all the grades on Sunday. For higher grades they used to start late but this year they are taking all the exams at once to be on the safe side and finish all together by June 3.
Sahar Khan, a teacher, said that in her school the children of KG and grades 1 to 3 are already on vacation after finishing their academic session. From next week, exams for higher grades will start and the school will close on June 6 for summer vacation. http://www.arabnews.com/news/573201

Palestinian Health Minister: We recommend not to go for the pilgrimage because of the "Corona"

 05/19/2014 - Last updated: 00:18
The media quoted a Palestinian on Sunday evening for the Palestinian Health Minister, Dr. Jawad Awad, his assertions regarding the absence of Palestine from the virus Corona killer, which is spread in Saudi Arabia, as he emphasized his fears of visiting the most friction in Palestine, such as Saudi Arabia, Jordan and advised not to go to perform Hajj this year for those who suffer of private health conditions.
He appealed to the Minister of Health, the elderly, children and those suffering from chronic diseases and immune deficiencies, not to go to perform Umrah or Hajj, because it poses a serious threat to them.
The minister said that his ministry Awad started distributing awareness leaflets on the border with Jordan, especially in the break Jericho, in addition to the intention of the ministry's intention to deploy medical teams as necessary.
The two ministers explained the symptoms of HIV infection serious take between five to 14 days, a sufficient period of time to a large extent for an infected person to move to the other side of the world without being the discovery of illness.
Awad stressed that so far the situation is under control and did not discover any case infected with the virus, but we recommend children under 12 years old and seniors over 65, pregnant women and impaired immune not go to Hajj this year, for their own safety. "And
He noted that the World Health Organization will hold a conference on the subject in Cairo soon to discuss ways of semen taken to combat the virus. He continued: Statistics indicate significant progress in our immunization systems where the ministry bought drugs vaccinated for the current year at $ 70 million dollars http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.arabs48.com%2F%3Fmod%3Darticles%26ID%3D108469

2 Umrah Pilgrims Allegedly Infected Treated MERS Intensive

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, Bandar Lampung - Two Umrah pilgrims in intensive care at the General Hospital of Abdul Moeloek Lampung Province, suspected of virus-Middle East Respitatory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV).

"Previously we had received three patients suspected of having the virus MERS, they are Umrah pilgrims from three districts in Lampung Province, from Bandar Lampung and Metro East. Trio with male gender lakil two men and one woman," said Dr. Nina Marlina one of the doctors Regional General Hospital Abdul Moeloek (RSUDAM) that handles these patients, in Bandarlampung on Sunday.
He said, all three having symptoms such as high fever and dipernafasan at body temperature, the same characteristics as the patient virus MERS. Characteristics of the virus such as high temperature and cough.
"Two people are under treatment, because this is a new possibility that patients exposed to viruses from the Middle East. Patients over age 40 years, some even over 50 years comes from the Metro," he said.
One patient explained, female from Bandarlampung been discharged because based on the examination, otherwise negative. Previously these patients, came on Friday (25/4) and return on Friday (16/5).
He reveals, for the other two patients was conducted by a team of intensive care doctors. Including the examination of blood samples, saliva and lung X-ray. "We are awaiting lab results from both patient examination, if otherwise it will be immediately sent back negative," he said.
To anticipate the addition of Dr. Nina patients revealed no fever for residents who may not be treated in isolation, but for patients who have a fever will be treated in a special room. Because the virus is new and also harm to the patient.
"If the patient is not fever may not be treated in isolation," he said. http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.republika.co.id%2Fberita%2Fnasional%2Fumum%2F14%2F05%2F18%2Fn5ry3x-2-jamaah-umrah-diduga-terinfeksi-mers-dirawat-intensif%3Futm_source%3Ddlvr.it%26utm_medium%3Dtwitter

Umrah Pilgrims Died In Plane, MERS-CoV Unrelated



Umrah Pilgrims Died In Plane, MERS-CoV Unrelated

Published: Sunday, May 18, 2014 7:11 PM
KUALA LUMPUR: An elderly woman died in a flight back from Umrah with my family last Friday.
Health director-general Datuk Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah said initial autopsy results, however, find 89-year-old woman was negative infections Respiratory Syndrome Virus Middle East Korona (MERS-CoV), but develop pneumonia.
He is said to have shortness of breath on a flight from Jeddah to Kuala Lumpur before died.
According to Dr Noor Hisham, the assembly of fever, cough and shortness of breath for three days while in the holy land and never get treatment while there.
"Family members also said he suffered from asthma, high blood pressure and heart disease as well as being in treatment before performing Umrah," he said in a statement Sunday.
He said he is awaiting final autopsy results to determine the exact cause of death of the woman.
"As a preventive measure all 107 passengers and 12 crew on board the aircraft along the woman underwent screening MERS-CoV," he said.
Three of them suffered mild fever, while another cough and four of them are given symptomatic treatment as well advised to follow-up if not cured within 14 days of the arrival date.
This is the second incident and congregations involved sindorm certified free of diseases that can be fatal.
Malaysia recorded the first death due to MERS-CoV on 13 April when 54-year-old man died following a severe pneumonia was infected with the virus.
The man who hails from Batu Pahat, Johor Umrah in March and complained of fever and difficulty in breathing for about 10 days after returning home and put into Hospital Sultanah Nora Ismail, Batu Pahat, Johor on April 10. http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mstar.com.my%2Fberita%2Fberita-semasa%2F2014%2F05%2F18%2Fumrah-meninggal%2F

Saudi Arabia’s $16 billion religious tourism at risk with Mers outbreak

May 18, 2014
 Saudi Arabia’s US$16 billion religious tourism industry could be hampered by a worsening of the Mers outbreak, Bank of America Merrill Lynch has warned.
The bank predicted little macroeconomic impact on the kingdom in the near term, but it remained watchful for further developments if the contagion spread further.
“Most of the potential adverse impact is likely to fall on consumption and on export of services related to tourism – religious tourism, particularly,” wrote Jean-Michel Saliba, an economist at the bank.
“Increased uncertainty may pose further headwinds on a recovering Saudi consumer after the labour market reform shock.”
First identified in Saudi Arabia in 2012, Middle East Respiratory Syndrome is a deadly virus that has so far caused 163 deaths in the kingdom. The UAE, Egypt, Jordan, the Netherlands and the United States have also reported cases, mainly linked to people who had visited Saudi Arabia.
...
The World Health Organisation has so far not deemed Mers threatening enough to declare a global health emergency, a move that might include travel and trade restrictions. But it is likely to change its assessment if the virus mutates into a strain that transmits more easily from person to person.
Officials are also concerned that a large influx of religious tourists into the kingdom in July during Ramadan and in October during Haj could raise the rate of infection and its geographic reach.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch estimated that Saudi Arabia’s annual pilgrimage revenues represent 2 per cent of its GDP. The government placed restrictions on travel during last year’s pilgrimage season, pushing tourist levels down to 2 million from 3.2 million the year before.
To gauge the potential economic impact of Mers, the bank drew comparisons with the Sars epidemic, which started in China in 2002 and spread to other countries. Between November 2002 and July 2003, the outbreak of Sars in China caused 8,273 infection cases and 775 deaths in multiple countries, it said.
The Chinese government estimated Sars shaved 0.8 percentage points off annual GDP in 2003. The services sector was worst hit, including tourism, hotels, restaurants, retail and transportation.

World Health Organization: MERS transmission now serious concern

microscopic_virus
Microscopic picture of virus | PHOTO CREDIT: Wiki Commons

Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) is a serious concern, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), but that doesn’t mean that everyone is taking it seriously.

BIRMINGHAM, UK, May 17, 2014 — The World Health Organization (WHO) met this week to discuss the impact of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) on public health. Their conclusion was that the spread of the MERS corona-virus – which has a fatality rate of almost 30 per cent - has become more serious and urgent.
However, at the same time, WHO said that – for now, at least – the illness does not constitute a global health emergency. “Declaring an emergency is “a major act” that can “raise anxieties,” said Dr. Keiji Fukuda, the organization’s assistant director-general for health security. “Despite concerns about the syndrome, researchers have not found any increasing evidence of person-to-person transmissibility,” he said.
From the CNN website:
There have been 571 confirmed cases of MERS, including 171 deaths, according to the World Health Organization. The number of countries with confirmed cases expanded to 18, with a case in the Netherlands, WHO reported Wednesday.
Many of the cases are in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Even without any official worldwide alert, Anne Schuchat, the head of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, acknowledges that “this is a relatively new virus that does have a high fatality rate,”
Authorities haven’t pinned down all the details about how exactly it arose and how it spreads, though Schuchat said, “we don’t have evidence right now that this is airborne … the way the measles virus is.”
“We don’t know as much as we would like so far,” the CDC official and assistant surgeon general in the U.S. Public Health Service told CNN’s Brooke Baldwin on Wednesday. “… But we’re tracking it and trying to understand.”
While the evidence is by no means conclusive, there remains a strong probability that the virus is transmitted to humans by camels. One particular study carried out on Omani camels showed a 100 percent presence of the antibodies developed specifically in response to the MERS corona-virus. Residents of some of the Middle Eastern countries affected, however, show little concern for the possible implications, continuing to organise camel competitions and beauty contests in the United Arab Emirates, and in some cases, as in Saudi Arabia, defiantly posting images of themselves kissing camels on social media.
So why is this important?
Well, for several reasons. MERS is a virus from the same family as SARS, or Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, which killed nearly 800 people worldwide after it first appeared in China in 2002. Like SARS, the virus causes a lung infection, coughing and breathing difficulties, and fever. Additionally, MERS can also lead to rapid kidney failure. There are no vaccines or antiviral treatments for MERS. The disease kills approximately 30 per cent of those infected.
In addition, we are now starting to see incidences of MERS infection in the United States, from people who have recently visited Saudi Arabia. Given that Saudi Arabia attracts millions of people from around the world every year for the annual Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca, the probability of the virus spreading beyond the Arabian peninsula increases exponentially, especially if there are no border controls set up to identify travelers who may have an increased risk of infection.

Thirdly, despite the reassurances of Dr. Keiji Fukuda of the WHO, who does not want to declare a global health emergency in case it would “raise anxieties”, it might just be a good idea to heed the maxim “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure”. Although not much is known about this particular virus, one characteristic of viruses is that they mutate, and what could be a relatively harmless virus one day has the capacity to change into something very nasty indeed.

Last but not least, we have the uncomfortable reality that cases of the MERS corona-virus – at the moment – constitute a phenomenon that if not actually exclusive to Muslim countries, is certainly predominant within them. Given the social environment of the twin evils of political correctness and multiculturalism that has been written about in these pages recently, it is possible that serious efforts to prevent a worldwide pandemic could be hindered by cries of “Islamophobia” and “racism” from those on the political spectrum blinded by their own self-righteousness to the point where they become willing to place thousands, if not millions of lives at risk.  http://www.brennerbrief.com/world-health-organization-mers-transmission-now-serious-concern/

Foreign doctors, nurses in Saudi Arabia could take MERS global


Source: Reuters - Sun, 18 May 2014 12:00 PM
 By Sharon Begley
NEW YORK, May 18 (Reuters) - The biggest risk that Middle East Respiratory Syndrome will become a global epidemic, ironically, may lie with globe-trotting healthcare workers.
From Houston to Manila, doctors and nurses are recruited for lucrative postings in Saudi Arabia, where MERS was first identified in 2012. Because the kingdom has stepped up hiring of foreign healthcare professionals in the last few years, disease experts said, there is a good chance the MERS virus will hitch a ride on workers as they return home.
"This is how MERS might spread around the world," said infectious disease expert Dr Amesh Adalja of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.
It can take five to 14 days for someone infected with MERS to show symptoms, more than enough time for a contagious person to fly to the other side of the world without being detectable.
Healthcare workers "are at extremely high risk of contracting MERS compared to the general public," Adalja said.
The threat has attracted new attention with the confirmation of the first two MERS cases in the United States. Both are healthcare workers who fell ill shortly after leaving their work in Saudi hospitals and boarding planes bound west.
About one-third of the MERS cases treated in hospitals in the Saudi Red Sea city of Jeddah were healthcare workers, according to the World Health Organization.
Despite the risk, few of the healthcare workers now in, or planning to go to, Saudi Arabia are having second thoughts about working there, according to nurses, doctors and recruiters interviewed by Reuters.
Michelle Tatro, 28, leaves next week for the kingdom, where she will work as an open-heart-surgery nurse. Tatro, who typically does 13-week stints at hospitals around the United States, said her family had sent her articles about MERS, but she wasn't worried.
"I was so glad to get this job," she told Reuters. "Travel is my number one passion."
So far, international health authorities have not publicly expressed concern about the flow of expatriate medical workers to and from Saudi Arabia.
"There is not much public health authorities or border agents can do," said infectious disease expert Dr Michael Osterholm of the University of Minnesota. "Sure, they can ask people, 'did you work in a healthcare facility in Saudi Arabia,' but if the answer is yes, then what?"
Healthcare workers are best placed to understand the MERS risk, Osterholm said, and "there should be a heightened awareness among them of possible MERS symptoms."
Neither the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention nor the Department of Homeland Security responded to questions about whether they were considering monitoring healthcare workers returning to the United States.
SOARING DEMAND
In the last few years, the number of expatriates working in Saudi Arabia has soared, said Suleiman Arabie, managing director of Houston, Texas-based recruiting firm SA International, with thousands now working in the kingdom.
About 15 percent of physicians working in the kingdom are American or European, and some 40 percent of nurses are Filipino or Malaysian, according to estimates by recruiters and people who have worked in hospitals there.
The majority of U.S.-trained medical staff are on one- or two-year contracts, which results in significant churn as workers rotate in and out of Saudi medical facilities.
The Saudi government is building hundreds of hospitals and offering private companies interest-free loans to help build new facilities. Its healthcare spending jumped to $27 billion last year from $8 billion in 2008. Building the hospitals is one challenge, staffing them with qualified personnel is another.
Arabie's firm is trying to fill positions at two dozen medical facilities in Saudi Arabia for pulmonologists, a director of nursing, a chief of physiotherapy and scores more.
Doctors in lucrative, in-demand specialties such as cardiology and oncology can make $1 million for a two-year contract, recruiters said.
Nurses' pay depends on their home country, with those from the United States and Canada earning around $60,000 a year while those from the Philippines get about $12,000, recruiters said. That typically comes with free transportation home, housing, and 10 weeks of paid vacation each year. For Americans, any income under about $100,000 earned abroad is tax-free, adding to the appeal of a Saudi posting.
One Filipina nurse, who spoke anonymously so as not to hurt her job prospects, told Reuters that she was "willing to go to Saudi Arabia because I don't get enough pay here." In a private hospital in Manila, she made 800 pesos (about $18) a day.
"I know the risks abroad but I'd rather take it than stay here," she said. "I am not worried about MERS virus. I know how to take care of myself and I have the proper training."
None of Arabie's potential candidates "have expressed any concern" about MERS. Only one of the hundreds of professionals placed by Toronto-based medical staffing firm Helen Ziegler & Associates Inc. decided to return to the United States because of MERS, it said, and one decided not to accept a job in Jeddah she had been hired for.
Recruitment agencies in Manila have also continued to send nurses to the kingdom since the MERS outbreak, said Hans Leo Cacdac, the head of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration. The government advises that returning workers be screened for MERS, Labour and Employment Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz said this week.
Expat healthcare workers now working in Saudi Arabia feel confident local authorities are taking the necessary steps to combat the spread of MERS in hospitals.
"Just today they came and put up giant posters in our hospital on MERS," said Dr Taher Kagalwala, a pediatrician originally from Mumbai who works at Al Moweh General Hospital in a town about 120 miles from Tai'f city in western Saudi Arabia
"I have not heard of or seen any healthcare workers looking to leave their jobs or return to their countries because of the MERS panic. If it was happening, there would have been gossip very soon." (Reporting by Sharon Begley; additional reporting by Manuel P. Mogato in Manila and Zeba Siddiqui in Mumbai,; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Ross Colvin)  http://www.trust.org/item/20140518115932-xe07d/?source=reHeadlineStory

MERS Appears To Spread With Business-Meeting Contact

Audio for this story from will be available at approximately 12:00 p.m. ET.
NPR's Lynn Neary talks to science correspondent Rob Stein about the first human-to-human infection of MERS in the U.S. http://www.npr.org/2014/05/18/313618316/mers-appears-to-spread-with-business-meeting-contact

MERS virus weakened by mutations, researchers found

MERS virus weakened by mutations, researchers found

Published online 6 May 2014

As MERS cases spike in Saudi Arabia, scientists have identified antibodies to neutralize the virus.

Moheb Costandi
Scientists have identified antibodies which neutralize the MERS-Coronavirus, a breakthrough that could lead to a treatment.
MERS, which emerged in Saudi Arabia two years ago, appears to have become more virulent in recent weeks: the kingdom has confirmed a spike of 143 more cases in April alone, raising its total number of infections to 339.
Wayne Marasco and colleagues at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, in Boston, collaborating with a research team from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, screened a vast selection of human antibodies and identified seven that bind to the MERS-CoV spike protein1.
The spike protein normally interacts with receptors on the surface of the host cell, allowing the virus to enter so it can replicate. The researchers showed that the seven antibodies they identified prevent this interaction by attaching to one of three different sites within the spike protein receptor-binding region.
They also examined how the virus changes upon exposure to the antibodies, revealing that the same mutations that allow it to evade being detected by them also weakened its ability to replicate.
Another research team, led by Liwei Jiang of Tsinghua University in Beijing, used a different approach. They screened a library of antibody fragments displayed on the surface of yeast cells. They then used a purified version of the MERS-CoV spike protein to identify two monoclonal antibodies that interact with it, and isolated them with magnetic beads2.
Last month, the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Health announced it was discussing the development of a MERS-CoV vaccine with drug companies. These new studies are a step towards developing an effective prophylactic treatment.
Many of the new confirmed MERS cases were among staff at hospitals in the Saudi capital, Riyadh. The United States confirmed its first case last week; the patient, a Saudi Arabian who worked in one of the Riyadh hospitals housing MERS patients, was visiting relatives in Indiana, was hospitalized there and is now said to be recovering well. Marasco and his colleagues note that their study "offers the possibility of developing human monoclonal antibody-based immunotherapy, especially for healthcare workers."
"The findings are promising, but it's highly unlikely that these antibodies will make their way to the market soon," says Islam Hussein, a virologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Most likely a cocktail of antibodies will be needed to overcome the emergence of mutants [that] escape from neutralization." http://www.natureasia.com/en/nmiddleeast/article/10.1038/nmiddleeast.2014.114

Saturday, May 17, 2014

No effect for on tourism as « Corona »« Jeddah » and « Mecca

Specialize : No effect for « Corona » on tourism as « Jeddah » and « MeccaHouse of Life - 1 hour ago


They attributed not affected Jeddah and Mecca in the rates of uptake of these two cities to high rates of awareness and prevention of the disease among members of Saudi society , in addition to the entry of the month of Ramadan in the middle of summer vacation , when rising rates of turnout to perform Umrah , pointing out that the virus « Corona » did not reach the stage of an epidemic in a civil Jeddah , which like the rest of the diseases that spread in years past , such as avian flu and swine . A member of the Council of the Emirate of Makkah Region Fahd Alovenana : « There will be no effect of the virus « Corona » turnout rates in the area ... http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Falhayat.com%2FArticles%2F2431320%2F%25D9%2585%25D8%25AA%25D8%25AE%25D8%25B5%25D8%25B5%25D9%2588%25D9%2586-%25D9%2584%25D8%25A7-%25D8%25AA%25D8%25A3%25D8%25AB%25D9%258A%25D8%25B1-%25D9%2584%25D9%2580--%25D9%2583%25D9%2588%25D8%25B1%25D9%2588%25D9%2586%25D8%25A7--%25D8%25B9%25D9%2584%25D9%2589-%25D8%25A7%25D9%2584%25D8%25B3%25D9%258A%25D8%25A7%25D8%25AD%25D8%25A9-%25D8%25A8%25D9%2580--%25D8%25AC%25D8%25AF%25D8%25A9--%25D9%2588-%25D9%2585%25D9%2583%25D8%25A9

"WHO": "Corona" does not move touching and mixing .. and we are coordinating with the Kingdom to face

WRONG..

May - 12-2014


An official of the World Health Organization studies have shown that the virus "Corona" does not move touching and mixing unless the patient sneezes and blowing spray him, noting that most of the recorded cases of health workers were caused by failing to take necessary preventive measures.
The Director of the Department of Infectious Diseases and Epidemiological Organization Dr. Jawad quarantined, the Saudi Ministry of Health has asked the organization to provide support and counseling have to face the "Corona", and analyzes it in the world, also called for coordination with my organization of Agriculture and Food, the World Organization for Animal Health in this regard... http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.almaqal.net%2F%3Fp%3D55093

Guard tightened vs MERS-CoV

By
MANILA, Philippines—Air travelers entering the country through its premiere gateway will be thoroughly screened for the dreaded Middle East Respiratory Syndrome-Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) through the combined efforts of the Manila International Airport Authority (MIAA) and the Department of Health (DOH).
The MIAA is the government agency that operates the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia). Its medical division, in coordination with the Bureau of Quarantine under the DOH, has implemented “operational procedures” at the international gateway to prevent the entry of the MERS-CoV virus.
Among the measures are the intensification of surveillance, use of thermal scanners, issuance of health checklists and alert notices to all arriving international passengers, and a mass information campaign about MERS-CoV.
The MIAA’s ambulance will be deployed, along with the bureau’s, to transport people suspected of having MERS-CoV to the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine in Muntinlupa City.
“All control measures are in place, personal protective equipment are available, and adequate medical personnel are positioned to ensure that airport stakeholders are safe and protected,” said MIAA public affairs chief Connie Bungag in a statement.
Bungag said that as part of infection control measures, only the DOH is authorized to release information about suspected MERS-CoV cases detected at the airport.
“Only the DOH has the sole authority to divulge information related to the illness, since data related to the subject are evolving every now and then,” Bungag said.
The Bureau of Quarantine, whose office is located near Naia Terminals 1 and 2, would be designated “a restricted area” as part of the measures, she added.
Health Secretary Enrique Ona earlier said that while the Philippines remained MERS-CoV-free, Filipinos, particularly those working in the Middle East where there are cases of the disease, must take precautions.
The Philippine Overseas Employment Administration last week called on employers and agents of Middle East-based overseas Filipino workers to give them free tests for MERS-CoV prior to their return to the Philippines. http://globalnation.inquirer.net/104646/guard-tightened-vs-mers-cov

...Transmission risk considerations


..Most MERS infections have occurred in the Middle East or have been directly linked to a case in that region. Though sporadic imported cases have been occurring since early in the outbreak, secondary infections have been more rare but did occur after primary cases were detected in the United Kingdom, France, and Tunisia.
Global and national health officials have said the risk of secondary infections is low and limited mainly to people who had unprotected, close contact with MERS patients, such as family members or healthcare workers. Today's CDC announcement raises questions about the level of contact that puts people at risk, with a business meeting presumably reflecting a lower level of contact than a care-giving scenario involving a sick family member or hospital patient.
Swerdlow told reporters that the virus still doesn't appear to spread among humans easily in a sustained way, but he added that aggressive testing will not only help flesh out transmission patterns but also reveal more about what appears to be a broader range of severity for the disease, from no symptoms to severe and sometimes fatal pneumonia. "We don't understand a lot about how the virus is transmitting, so we're casting a wide net, hoping to learn more," he said. "Our most important point is that doctors should be vigilant."
"We don't think this changes the risk to the general public or public health practices," Swerdlow said.
The Illinois man's illness, though considered the third US infection, won't be reflected in the global MERS count, because positive serology results aren't included in the World Health Organization (WHO) case definition for MERS, Swerdlow said.
Michael T. Osterholm, PhD, MPH, director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, publisher of CIDRAP News, said one case doesn't change the picture and the event is consistent with other examples of MERS spread.
Though the risk of transmission still appears to be low, he said there's a lot that is still not known about the disease—for example, whether some patients are "super shedders" who are more likely to transmit the disease to others.
"All of us should be more careful to describe the risk to the public," Osterholm said, adding that the message should be balanced and not "oversell" a lack of risk....  http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-persp...s-illinois-man