| Literature DB >> 31817037 |
Marnie Willman1,2, Darwyn Kobasa1,2, Jason Kindrachuk2.
Abstract
In 2012, an emerging viral infection was identified in Saudi Arabia that subsequently spread to 27 additional countries globally, though cases may have occurred elsewhere. The virus was ultimately named Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV), and has been endemic in Saudi Arabia since 2012. As of September 2019, 2468 laboratory-confirmed cases with 851 associated deaths have occurred with a case fatality rate of 34.4%, according to the World Health Organization. An imported case of MERS occurred in South Korea in 2015, stimulating a multi-month outbreak. Several distinguishing factors emerge upon epidemiological and sociological analysis of the two outbreaks including public awareness of the MERS outbreak, and transmission and synchronization of governing healthcare bodies. South Korea implemented a stringent healthcare model that protected patients and healthcare workers alike through prevention and high levels of public information. In addition, many details about MERS-CoV virology, transmission, pathological progression, and even the reservoir, remain unknown. This paper aims to delineate the key differences between the two regional outbreaks from both a healthcare and personal perspective including differing hospital practices, information and public knowledge, cultural practices, and reservoirs, among others. Further details about differing emergency outbreak responses, public information, and guidelines put in place to protect hospitals and citizens could improve the outcome of future MERS outbreaks.Entities:
Keywords: Middle East; Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS), zoonosis; Saudi Arabia; South Korea; coronavirus
Year: 2019 PMID: 31817037 PMCID: PMC6950189 DOI: 10.3390/v11121119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Global distribution of MERS-CoV outbreaks from 2012–2019. Data includes all documented occurrences of disease, including imported, nosocomial, and community cases. Highlighted in orange are countries with past or present MERS-CoV cases, while the countries of interest for the purposes of this paper, Saudi Arabia and South Korea, are shown in red. The direct importation of MERS-CoV from Saudi Arabia to South Korea is shown in red, stimulating the 2015 outbreak. Global maps were derived and/or modified from Servier Medical Art under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Highlighting key social and public health differences between the 2012 Saudi Arabian and 2015 South Korean MERS outbreaks. Differences in lifestyle of citizens, personal belief systems, and healthcare response to the outbreak are all suspected to have influenced the duration of the outbreak, and the final death toll.
| Saudi Arabia | South Korea | |
|---|---|---|
|
| 2013-present | May-July 2015 |
|
| Endemic | Imported |
|
| 60-year old resident | 68-year old traveller |
|
| 36–46% | 21% |
|
| >400 | 39 |
|
| Dromedary camels and livestock | Nosocomial |
|
| Dromedary camel milk and meat [ | Rice, pork, and beef |
|
| Poor | Good |
|
| RRT (rapid response team) | MERS-CoV Infection Prevention and Control Guideline Development Committee |
|
| Poor, conflicted among boards | Good, standardized |
|
| Information Unavailable | Mandatory masks, gloves, gowns for visitors and staff |
|
| High | Low |
|
| High | Low |