Bangkok Post

Mers disease causes panic in Korea

Deadly disease Mers has got South Korea’s population very concerned, but its danger may have been overhyped

- FOSTER KLUG

Sales of surgical masks surge amid fears of a deadly, poorly understood virus. Airlines announce “intensifie­d sanitising operations”. More than 1,100 schools close and 1,600 people — and 17 camels in zoos — are quarantine­d.

The current frenzy in South Korea over Mers, or Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome, brings to mind the other menacing diseases to hit Asia over the last decade — Sars, which killed hundreds, and bird flu.

Then, as now, confusion ruled as the media harped on the growing public panic, and healthcare workers and government officials struggled to understand and contain the diseases, sometimes downplayin­g the danger, sometimes inadverten­tly hyping it.

While it’s still early and Mers is a scary disease with no vaccine and a high death rate, there are so far more reasons for calm caution than for panic.

Here’s a look at what’s happening in South Korea.

Mers Cases Are Growing ...

South Korea has seen more than 40 cases and four deaths, the largest outbreak in the world outside of Saudi Arabia, where most of the more than 1,100 cases have been and where the disease was first seen in 2012.

The cases are linked to a 68-year-old man who travelled to the Middle East. When he returned and became sick last month, he visited two hospitals and two outpatient facilities, “creating multiple opportunit­ies for exposure among health care workers and other patients”, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said this week. The man wasn’t isolated because it wasn’t thought at first that he had been exposed to Mers, which is from the same virus family as the common cold and Sars.

“Further cases can be expected,” the UN health agency said. It announced on Friday that an agency team of experts will visit South Korea to review the fight against the virus.

Mers’ mortality rate is an estimated 30-40%, according to Nicolas Locker, a virology expert at the University of Surrey.

The symptoms are fever, cough and shortness of breath, with an average incubation period of five to six days. Transmissi­on comes through close contact with people — from living with or caring for someone, for instance — but camels are also thought to spread the virus, which explains the quarantine of camels at South Korean zoos.

Viruses like Mers “remind us all that the globe is indeed a small place when it comes to the rapidity with which infected people can move over large geographic distances, bringing viruses they may be incubating with them”, said Christophe­r Olsen, a virus expert at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, in an email.

... But It Isn’t Sweeping The Country

Despite media warnings about the virus “spreading” in South Korea, most of the cases are linked to a single hospital, as is a Korean man diagnosed in China. There’s no evidence yet in South Korea “of sustained transmissi­on in the community”, the WHO reports.

The four people who died were all mostly elderly and had previous respirator­y problems, according to the South Korean Health Ministry.

South Korea also has an efficient emergency response system, Locker said, and has learned much from previous disease scares, especially the Sars pandemic in 2003.

South Korea has airport containmen­t centres for respirator­y screenings, and 16 hospitals equipped with bio-containmen­t units for patients and staff, including 600 beds in negative pressure units for isolation and treatment, Locker said.

Washing hands, covering coughs and sneezes, not touching your f ace with unclean hands — this all helps prevent Mers, experts say.

Because it isn’t airborne and is only transmitte­d through close contact, it’s highly unlikely anyone will get the disease in crowded areas, like parks or schools, said Kang Cheol-In, an infectious diseases expert at the Seoul-based Samsung Medical Center.

The closing of hundreds of schools “really doesn’t make sense”, Kang said.

Media And Public Fears May Be Overblown

Some experts believe the government should have done more initially to convince the public that many of their fears are unwarrante­d.

Many people here, however, are in no mood to trust their public officials.

The Mers scare follows the sinking of a ferry that killed more than 300 people last year and was widely blamed in part on official incompeten­ce.

Some experts support a strong quarantine to stop Mers’ spread; others question its worth.

Kim Sung-han, a professor at the Seoulbased Asan Medical Center, said isolating anyone who has had contact with Mers patients, even if they don’t show symptoms, is pointless because no studies show the Mes virus can be spread during the incubation period.

“It’s like using a hammer to push in a thumbtack,” Kim said.

The possibilit­y of Mers spreading through South Korea is worrisome, of course, but Kim is sceptical that it will happen because the disease usually spreads slowly and requires close contact.

Kang, the infectious diseases expert, said the initial government response was inadequate, “but the people are also looking at things in an unreasonab­le manner”.

 ??  ?? Students in Seoul head to school in face masks.
Students in Seoul head to school in face masks.
 ??  ?? Workers in protective gear spray antiseptic solution in a plane at Incheon Internatio­nal Airport.
Workers in protective gear spray antiseptic solution in a plane at Incheon Internatio­nal Airport.
 ??  ?? People wearing face masks walks past
Gyeongbokg­ung Palace in Seoul.
People wearing face masks walks past Gyeongbokg­ung Palace in Seoul.

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