SARS
II? Public health officials on alert after new virus detected
World
Health Organization (WHO) officials are on alert after two confirmed
cases and one suspected case of a new virus from the same family as
SARS appeared in Saudi Arabia last week. Doctors are watching for any
sign the disease may spread.
RT,
24
September, 2012
The
cases involve a coronavirus (named for the corona, or halo, visible
around the virus under a microscope) that causes severe pneumonia and
kidney failure in patients. One of the confirmed cases is a 49
year-old man in intensive care in a London hospital after being
evacuated by air-ambulance to Britain from Qatar on September 11.
The
other two confirmed cases have already died.
Dr.
Ali Mohamed Zaki first revealed that a new coronavirus had been
discovered last week in a 60-year-old man at the Soliman Fakeeh
Hospital in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on the ProMED-mail website, a site
used to monitor infectious diseases around the globe. In the post,
Zaki noted that the coronavirus was similar to those found in bats.
The
most famous coronavirus was the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
(SARS) outbreak that killed about 916 and infected 8,422 worldwide.
The potential threat of this particular coronavirus is not yet known,
but World Health Organization (WHO) officials are monitoring the
situation.
"Given
that this is a novel coronavirus, WHO is currently in the process of
obtaining further information to determine the public health
implications of these two confirmed cases," the WHO said in a
statement.
The
discovery of the new virus comes at a potentially hazardous time; on
the eve of the Hajj, the Islamic holy pilgrimage to the city of
Mecca. Saudi Arabia opened its borders to pilgrims on September 17,
but the real influx of pilgrims is set for the end of October. Last
year, almost 2 million Muslims from around the world completed the
rite.
WHO
officials are not imposing any travel restrictions at the moment,
despite the potential for the new virus to go global.
The
Health Protection Agency (HPA) in the United Kingdom also weighed in
on the matter.
"The
HPA is providing advice to healthcare workers to ensure the patient
under investigation is being treated appropriately. In the light of
the severity of the illness that has been identified in the two
confirmed cases, immediate steps have been taken to ensure that
people who have been in contact with the UK case have not been
infected, and there is no evidence to suggest that they have,”
Professor John Watson, said in a statement.
While
urging vigilance, Professor Watson also echoed the WHO, saying there
was no reason for any travel advisories, no specific precautions to
take, and the ultimate reach and contagiousness of the virus has yet
to be determined.
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