South Korea | Government reports 10th death from MERS virus 

Hospital workers wearing protective gear push a wheeled stretcher carrying a suspected MERS patient at Samsung Medical Center in Seoul as a precaution against the MERS, Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, virus as they carry a suspected MERS patient at Samsung Medical Center in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, June 10, 2015. South Korea believes its MERS virus outbreak may have peaked, and experts say the next several days will be critical to determining whether the government's belated efforts have successfully stymied a disease that has killed seven people and infected nearly 100 in the country. (Hong Hae-in/Yonhap via AP) KOREA OUT

Hospital workers wearing protective gear push a wheeled stretcher carrying a suspected MERS patient at Samsung Medical Center in Seoul

South Korea reported a 10th death from the MERS virus yesterday, although officials say they believe the disease has peaked.
The victim was a 65-year-old man who had been treated for lung cancer and was hospitalized in the same facility as another MERS patient, the Health Ministry said.
The outbreak of Middle East respiratory syndrome has caused panic in South Korea. It has infected more than 120 people since the first case, a 68-year-old man who had traveled to the Middle East, was diagnosed on May 20.
About 3,800 people remained isolated yesterday after possible contact with infected people, according to the ministry, and more than 2,600 schools and kindergartens across South Korea were closed.
On Wednesday, experts from the World Health Organization and South Korea urged the schools’ reopening as the outbreak in the country has so far been contained to hospitals and there is no evidence of sustained transmission in the community.
South Korean officials believe the outbreak may have peaked, although they say the next few days will be crucial to determining whether their efforts to isolate patients and control the disease have worked. Three people diagnosed with MERS were released from hospitals yesterday, bringing the total discharged to seven.
President Park Geun-hye postponed her planned U.S. visit scheduled next week to focus on coping with the outbreak.
Most of the deaths so far have been of people who had been suffering from pre-existing medical conditions, such as respiratory problems or cancer.
Experts think MERS can spread in respiratory droplets, such as by coughing. But transmissions have mainly occurred through close contact, such as living with or caring for an infected person.
MERS has mostly been centered in Saudi Arabia and has a death rate of about 40 percent among reported cases. It belongs to the family of coronaviruses that includes the common cold and SARS, and can cause fever, breathing problems, pneumonia and kidney failure. AP

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