Published Date: 2013-06-26 22:03:14
Subject: PRO/AH/EDR> MERS-CoV - Eastern Mediterranean (35): Saudi Arabia, WHO
Archive Number: 20130626.1793072
A ProMED-mail post
[1] Saudi Arabia: WHO Global Alert and Response
[2] MERS-CoV meeting: WHO/EMRO (Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office)
Excerpt (#2 below)
[2] MERS-CoV meeting: WHO/EMRO (Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office)
Date: Wed 26 Jun 2013
Source: WHO EMRO [edited]
http://www.emro.who.int/surveillance-forecasting-response/surveillance-events/mers-cov-meeting-june-2013.html
http://www.emro.who.int/pdf/surveillance-forecasting-response/surveillance-events/mers-cov-meeting-june-2013.pdf
Health officials meet to discuss urgent measures for control of novel coronavirus infection (MERS-CoV).
Meeting on MERS-CoV concludes with urgent call to improve surveillance and strengthen global health preparedness
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Over
100 health officials from the countries in the Eastern Mediterranean
Region as well as from France, Germany and the United Kingdom met in the
WHO Regional Office in Cairo from [20 to 22 Jun 2013] and discussed a
collective response plan to counter the threats of novel coronavirus
infection to global health.
Dr Ala Alwan, WHO Regional Director
for WHO Eastern Mediterranean, and Dr Keiji Fukuda, Assistant
Director-General for Health Security and Environment, inaugurated this
meeting, which was also attended by WHO staff from the Regional Offices
for the Eastern Mediterranean and for Europe and WHO headquarters, as
well as representatives of WHO collaborating centres and other key
technical partners and networks that have been involved in the global
response to MERS-CoV. The meeting discussed the public health threats
related to the emergence of this virus, reviewed the current level of
preparedness and response measures in the region as well as provided
recommendations that can collectively improve and strengthen global
public health preparedness against MERS-CoV.
The meeting recognized that 3 main epidemiological patterns of this novel virus have been observed so far.
-
Sporadic cases in communities: At present, the source of the virus
infection or how these people became infected remains unknown;
-
Clusters of infections in families: In most of these clusters, there
appears to be person-to-person transmission, but it seems that this
transmission was limited to people who were in close contact with a sick
family member;
- Clusters of infections in health care facilities:
In these clusters, the sequence seems to be that an infected person was
admitted to hospital where that person then transmitted the virus to
other people in the health care facility.
The meeting
acknowledged that despite no current evidence of sustained
human-to-human transmission, MERS-CoV may evolve to spread quickly among
humans and affect wider geographical areas. While major knowledge gaps
remain in understanding the emergence of this virus, clinical
manifestations as well as the transmission risk, recent scientific
research is enhancing the global knowledge on the disease. This new
knowledge now needs to be translated into a set of concrete public
health actions in order to improve global and regional public health
preparedness.
The meeting also recognized that as much as
collecting and sharing of full epidemiological, clinical, immunologic
and virologic information related to MERS-CoV infections is essential
for better understanding and characterization of the disease that will
contribute to global preparedness against this novel infection,
coordinated and inter-sectoral actions are also important to increase
global, regional and inter-regional collaboration among countries, with
WHO and other international health partners in responding to the
outbreak caused by this novel virus.
The countries were also
encouraged to improve surveillance for detection of any sign that
signals sustained human-to-human transmission as well as participate in
further development of diagnostic assays through international
networking with technical agencies, sharing of materials and resources,
and participation in laboratory studies.
The meeting identified a
set of concrete public health action points that can collectively
improve and strengthen global public health preparedness, surveillance
and response to MERS-CoV.
--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail Rapporteur Kunihiko Iizuka
[This
moderator would have liked to have been a fly on the wall of this
meeting to hear the actual presentations and discussions of the full
epidemiological, clinical immunologic and virologic information related
to MERS-CoV infections. - Mod.MPP]
http://www.promedmail.org/direct.php?id=20130626.1793072
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