New
SARS-like virus is a 'threat to the entire world'
A
new SARS-like virus recently found in humans is "a threat to the
entire world," according to the director-general of the United
Nations' World Health Organization.
The
so-called novel coronavirus "is not a problem that any single
affected country can keep to itself or manage all by itself,"
Margaret Chan said Monday in her closing remarks at the 66th World
Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland.
The
world needs to pull together its resources to properly tackle the
virus which, Chan said, is her "greatest concern" at
present.
"We
understand too little about this virus when viewed against the
magnitude of its potential threat," she said, and more
information is needed "quickly" and "urgently."
"We
do not know where the virus hides in nature. We do not know how
people are getting infected. Until we answer these questions, we are
empty-handed when it comes to prevention. These are alarm bells. And
we must respond," she said.
Coronavirus
reported in France Health workers infected with coronavirus What is
coronavirus?
Novel
coronavirus is part of a family called coronaviruses, which cause
illnesses ranging from the common cold to SARS, or Severe Acute
Respiratory Syndrome, as well as a variety of animal diseases.
However, the new virus is not SARS.
The
virus had infected 44 people worldwide as of last week, most of them
in the Middle East, according to the World Health Organization's most
recent update Thursday. Half of them have died.
Also
in its Thursday update, the WHO appeared to have given the novel
coronavirus a name: Middle East respiratory symptom coronavirus, or
MERS-CoV.
A
23rd death was reported Tuesday, when a French hospital and the
French government reported a man diagnosed with the coronavirus had
died of organ failure.
The
patient, the first of two people to be diagnosed with novel
coronavirus, died at University Hospital of Lille, where he had been
treated since May 9.
The
man contracted the virus while visiting the Arabian Peninsula, said
Marisol Touraine, France's minister of social affairs and health, in
a statement.
The
second patient, also male, was in stable but very serious condition,
the hospital said. One of the patients shared a room with the other
and contracted the virus.
Joint
WHO missions with Saudi Arabia and Tunisia will take place as soon as
possible, with the goal of gathering the facts needed to conduct a
risk assessment, Chan said Monday.
Earlier
this month, the WHO said two health care workers in Saudi Arabia
became ill while treating patients.
Novel
coronavirus acts like a cold virus and attacks the respiratory
system, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said. But
symptoms, which include fever and a cough, are severe and can lead to
pneumonia and kidney failure. Gastrointestinal symptoms such as
diarrhea have also been seen, according to the WHO.
It's
not yet known how humans contract the virus, experts have said. Most
of the cases so far have been seen in older men with other medical
conditions; precise numbers are hard to come by, as officials don't
know how many people might contract a mild form.
Cases
have been identified in eight countries including France and Saudi
Arabia, according to the WHO. Other European countries include
Germany and the United Kingdom.
No
cases have been reported in the United States, but infectious disease
experts have said it would not be surprising.
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