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Wednesday 4 June 2014

Mers virus: Saudi Arabia raises death toll to 282.

The Mers virus has been indentified in almost a dozen countries but has hit Saudi Arabia the hardest

 Saudi Arabia says 282 people are now confirmed to have been killed by the Mers virus, almost 100 more than initially thought.

The increase came after a national review of hospital data from the time the virus emerged in 2012.
The deputy health minister, who has been criticised for his handling of the crisis, was sacked on Monday.
Cases of the virus, for which there is no known cure, have been confirmed in almost a dozen other countries.
Saudi authorities said there had now been 688 confirmed Mers (Middle East Respiratory Syndrome) infections in the kingdom. Before the revision the number of cases was believed to be 575.
Saudi health ministry spokesman Tariq Madani said that despite the revised figures, fewer people were now contracting the disease.
"Though the review showed confirmed cases that needed to be added, we are still witnessing a decline in the number of newly registered cases in the past few weeks" he said.
 Deadly symptoms
Of those infected, the country's health ministry said, 53 were still receiving treatment.
Saudi Arabia has registered the largest number of infections of Mers.
The virus is from the same family as the common cold, but can lead to kidney failure and pneumonia.
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What is Mers?
Mers virus
  • Acronym for Middle East Respiratory Syndrome
  • A type of coronavirus which causes respiratory infections
  • First death recorded in 2012 in Saudi Arabia
  • Camels are suspected to be the primary source of infection for humans.
    The mystery virus with no known cure
    line
    Cases have also been confirmed in Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, France, Germany, Italy, Tunisia, Egypt, the UK and, most recently, the US.
    Camels are suspected to be the main source of infection for humans. Saudi authorities have urged citizens to wear protective masks when dealing with the animals.
    The government's handling of the outbreak has been criticised, says the BBC's Arab affairs editor Sebastian Usher.
    Critics have accused it of rejecting outside scientific help that might have helped stem the spread of the virus, our correspondent says.

     Camels are suspected of passing the infection to humans
    On Monday, the day before the figures were revised, the Deputy Health Minister Ziad Memish was sacked without explanation.
    In April Saudi's King Abdullah sacked the health minister as the death toll climbed.

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