PUTRAJAYA, June 11 (Bernama) -- The Health Ministry is working closely
with the World Health Organisation (WHO) to monitor the spread of the
Novel Coronavirus or Middle East Respiratory Syndrom Coronavirus
(MERS-CoV) ad is stepping up surveillance in the country as a
precautionary measure.
Source from (Bernama): http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v7/ge/newsgeneral.php?id=955435
Published: Jun 12, 2013
Source from (The Star Online): http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2013/6/12/nation/13227348&sec=nation
Published: Jun 12, 2013
Source from (The Sun Daily): http://www.thesundaily.my/news/739479
Published: Jun 12, 2013
Health Deputy Director-General (Public Health) Datuk Dr Lokman Hakim
Sulaiman advised those going to the affected countries in the Middle
East and Europe to take the necessary health precaution.
The ministry, he said, was also working with tour agencies and
companies operating the haj pilgrimage this season to provide their
clients with adequate information on the disease.
He said so far, WHO had not imposed restriction on visits to any countries and the vaccine for the illness had yet to be found.
Although there had been no report of MERS detected in the country, he
said efforts were being made by the ministry to detect early any signs
of the illness.
"It is because there is no vaccine yet for MERS that we advise those
going to and returning from Saudi Arabia and to take care of their
cleanliness and personal hygiene as well as seek immediate treatment if
they have health problems," he told reporters at the presentation of the
excellent service medals to staff of the ministry by Health Minister
Datuk Seri Dr S.Subramaniam at the Putrajaya International Convention
centre (PICC) here Tuesday.
The Health Ministry, in a statement issued last Friday, said the Middle
East countries that reported the MERS-CoV cases are Saudi Arabia,
United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Qatar and Tunisia, while the European
countries are Germany, France and United Kingdom.
WHO special adviser for health security and environment, Andrew Harper,
in a media briefing in Geneva, today urged health workers around the
world to be on the alert for symptoms of the deadly MERS, which he said,
had the potential to circle the globe and cause a pandemic.
On website postings claiming that the Arab Saudi government was
tight-lipped on the matter, despite the approaching fasting month, Dr
Lokman said the Saudi Arabian government had always shared information
on the disease and was working with WHO to study the illness.
MERS-CoV was first detected in Saudi Arabia last year and until now, 31
of the 55 people confirmed with the illness world wide, died.
-- BERNAMA
No comments:
Post a Comment