South Korea | People avoid hospitals as gov’t quiet on MERS

A couple wears masks as a precaution against the MERS virus as they walk on the Myeongdong, one of the main shopping districts, in Seoul

A couple wears masks as a precaution against the MERS virus as they walk on the Myeongdong, one of the main shopping districts, in Seoul

As South Korea continues to announce new cases of the Middle East respiratory syndrome, Seoul bank worker Lee Ji Hyun has decided to avoid hospitals until she’s sure she and her family won’t be exposed to any contagion.
Lee has a toddler fighting a cold that she plans to treat at home. A week into a developing public health crisis that has caused more than 900 school closures and more than 1,600 to be quarantined, government silence on the hospitals where the MERS virus was spread has drawn criticism and contributed to panic.
That could hinder the response, with patients staying away from hospitals and a greater risk of some cases going undiagnosed. South Korea announced five more patients yesterday, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 35. The health ministry yesterday confirmed its third death from the virus.
“There is so much unfiltered information floating about which hospitals to visit and which hospitals not to visit, and the government isn’t helping with the confusion,” Lee said.
Disclosing hospitals with MERS patients would “cause excessive anxiety among those people who are in or have been to the hospitals and create misunderstanding about them,” Kwon Jun Wook, chief of the MERS management team at the health ministry, said at a briefing on June 2. “What we are more urgently pursuing is running a system that those monitoring patients can use to understand the situation.”
As many as 10,000 people simultaneously accessed an online map that allows viewers to cross-check tips about hospitals with MERS patients, causing the server to go down, according to a man who identified himself as Jimmy Park, and responded to an e-mail sent to the website.
“I thought fears are worsened by too many rumors circulating,” Park wrote in an e-mail. “I thought it’d be good to have them ascertained.”
“It just shows how intensely people want to know which hospitals have MERS patients,” said Han Mi Jung, an official at the Korean Health and Medical Workers’ Union. Han urged the government to release the hospital list soon, as people who have been to those hospitals would be able to examine themselves more quickly and thoroughly. Sam Kim and Natasha Khan, Bloomberg

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