MERS death toll in Saudi climbs to 107

Saudi announced two new deaths from the MERS coronavirus on Saturday

Update: 2014-05-03 21:50 GMT
In this Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013, file photo, Egyptian Muslim pilgrims, some wearing masks as a precaution against the Middle East respiratory syndrome, pray after they cast stones at a pillar, symbolizing the stoning of Satan, in a ritual called "
Riyadh: Saudi health authorities announced on Saturday two new deaths from the MERS coronavirus, raising to 109 the number of fatalities since the disease appeared in the kingdom in September 2012. 
 
A 25-year-old man has died in the Red Sea port city of Jeddah and a woman of 69, who suffered from tuberculosis and anaemia, died in Mecca, also western Saudi Arabia, the health ministry said. 
 
At the same time, 35 new cases of the severe respiratory disease have been recorded, raising the number of sufferers in the Gulf state over the past two years to 396, the world's highest tally. 
 
Yesterday, US health officials said the first case of MERS has been confirmed in the United States.
 
The person infected with Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a health care provider who had travelled to Riyadh for work, they said. 
 
And last week, Egypt recorded its first infection after a person who arrived from Saudi Arabia tested positive. 
 
Public concern in Saudi Arabia over the spread of MERS has mounted after the resignation of at least four doctors at Jeddah's King Fahd Hospital who refused to treat patients for fear of infection. 
 
Some research has suggested that camels are a likely source of the virus. 
 
MERS is considered a deadlier but less-transmissible cousin of the Sars virus that erupted in Asia in 2003 and infected 8,273 people, nine percent of whom died. 
 
There are no vaccines or antiviral treatments for MERS, a disease with a mortality rate of more than 40 per cent that experts are still struggling to understand.

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