For
Only The Second Time, The WHO Has Called An Emergency Meeting About A
Virus
8
July, 2013
While
the Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS CoV) hasn’t
yet reached pandemic potential,
the World Health organisation (WHO) is worried enough about the virus
to call its second-ever
emergency meeting.
The
first emergency meeting happened in 2009 and the subject was the
H1N1 bird flu virus, which sickened thousands. The meetings are part
of a relatively new system called the International Health
Regulations Emergency Committee, which was implemented after the
SARS outbreak in 2002.
The
talks will take place on Tuesday, July 9, and Thursday July 11, over
a phone conference with experts from around the world. though the
virus was first reported on back in September of last year,
researchers still haven’t been able to figure out where it’s
coming from and how it’s infecting humans.
80
people have been sickened and 45 have died, according to the latest
numbers. Most cases are either in Saudi Arabia or in people who had
recently visited. Researchers have seen limited human-to-human
spread, as well.
During
the meeting, researchers may decide to label the virus an
“international health emergency,” according
to the AFP.
Experts are worried about the potential for spread during the annual
Hajj pilgrimage — one of the world’s largest gatherings, taking
place in Mecca and Medina.
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