South
Korean man who was China's only MERS case recovers
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[June 26, 2015] SEOUL
(Reuters) - A South Korean man who became China's only case of Middle
East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) has fully recovered and is being
released from a Chinese hospital on Friday, the South Korean health
ministry said.
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The 44-year-old man, whose father is another MERS patient, had
defied recommendations from health authorities in South Korea to
remain in voluntary quarantine, flying to Hong Kong in late May
before taking a bus to mainland China.
He later tested positive for the MERS virus and had been
hospitalised in the Chinese city of Huizhou, where his initially
unstable condition gradually improved, the ministry said.
There have been no other MERS case reported in China or Hong Kong.
The release of the South Korean man in China will bring the number
of people who have recovered and have been discharged from hospital
in the outbreak to 82, about 45 percent of the total cases.
Sixty-nine people remain hospitalised.
The South Korean health ministry reported on Friday that two more
MERS patients had died, bringing the number of fatalities in the
country to 31.
Both were elderly patients and had serious pre-existing medical
conditions, as was the case with most of those who have died in the
outbreak, the ministry said.
The ministry also reported one new case, taking the total to 181,
the highest number of cases outside Saudi Arabia.
South Korean health authorities were more guarded this week in their
view on whether or not the outbreak is slowing, after an optimistic
assessment last week that it may have levelled off.
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First identified in humans in 2012, MERS is caused by a corona virus
from the same family as the one that triggered the 2003 outbreak of
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). There is no cure or
vaccine.
South Korea has ordered hospitals to track all emergency ward
visitors after the outbreak of the virus was blamed on difficulties
locating every person exposed to the disease, the health ministry
said on Thursday.
(Reporting by Ju-min Park; Editing by Jack Kim and Ryan Woo)
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