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WHO news release:Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office (EMRO) following the conclusion of an inter-country meeting on MERS-CoV nCoV novel coronavirus June 22, 2013

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  • WHO news release:Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office (EMRO) following the conclusion of an inter-country meeting on MERS-CoV nCoV novel coronavirus June 22, 2013

    via email to media -


    The following WHO news release is being issued by the WHO's Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office (EMRO) following the conclusion of an inter-country meeting on MERS-CoV:

    WHO News Release (EMRO)
    22 June 2013

    Public Health Officials Agree Priority Actions to Detect and Control MERS-CoV

    Cairo, 20-22 June 2013


    22 JUNE 2013 / CAIRO - Strengthening countries’ abilities to control, detect, and treat cases of MERS-CoV infection are among the most urgent actions needed at national level to stem the growing outbreak of disease caused by the virus, over 100 public health experts meeting at WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office agreed.

    The experts, who came from all countries in the Middle East and North Africa and Europe which have already registered MERS-CoV cases, and from throughout WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR), agreed that there is a list of priority actions which need to be agreed internationally and implemented nationally.

    At an international level, fast and complete reporting of cases, with contact histories, clinical care and treatment outcomes in as much detail as possible, and collected in a uniform manner across countries, is necessary for the international public health community to be able to build up a picture of what works and what doesn’t in combatting this virus.

    “Having the same tools and protocols in all countries allows us to draw on and implement best practice from around the world, and to pool our information and resources most effectively on an international level,” said Dr Ala Alwan, WHO Regional Director for the EMR, who chaired the meeting. “This meeting has taken us an important step in that direction.”

    “At the moment we have an important window where cases have still been relatively few and human transmission is relatively limited,” added Dr Keiji Fukuda, WHO Assistant Director-General for Health Security and the Environment. “We need to exploit this chance to agree and implement the best public health measures possible across the board for, in so doing, we stand the best chance of controlling this virus before it spreads further.”

    The meeting agreed that a series of actions in seven key areas were key to increasing Member States’ and the international community’s ability to prepare for, control, detect, alert the world to, and treat cases of diseases caused by MERS-CoV. These areas are surveillance, mass gatherings preparation, clinical management of cases, laboratory diagnostics, infection control, communications, and International Health Regulation (2005) reporting.

    Participants agreed, for example, that every country should enhance surveillance for severe acute respiratory illness in accordance with prevailing local situation and urgently investigate any cluster of pneumonia with unusual clinical presentations, or any immune-compromised patient or healthcare worker with any unusual sign of acute respiratory infection. Furthermore, Member States should share data with WHO and report any confirmed and probable cases of MERS-CoV within 24 hours of classification.

    In the area of mass gatherings, the participants agreed that Member States should to develop specific plans when MERS-CoV might be an additional risk for an event, and they also highlighted the need for standardised protocols for serological testing, and systematic and sequential sample collection.

    In the area of communications, the value of fast and transparent reporting of cases both to the public and to WHO via the system of International Health Regulations National Focal Points was highlighted, while the needs to better understand the probability and means of hospital-based transmission of the disease, and to ensure hospitals had adequate knowledge and facilities to treat cases, including the most severe ones, were also highlighted.

    “Collecting and sharing epidemiological, clinical, immunologic, and genetic information related to MERS-CoV infections in the right way is essential if the disease is to be better characterized in terms of source, exposure and presentation. Coordinated and intersectoral global action to increase regional and inter-regional collaboration between countries, WHO and other international partners is vital,” the meeting concluded.

    For more information:

    Division of Communicable Diseases:
    Tel: 202 22765288
    E-mail: DCD@emro.who.int
    Media and Communication Unit:
    Tel: 202 22765020
    E-mail: MAC@emro.who.int
    Last edited by sharon sanders; June 22, 2013, 11:14 AM. Reason: added contact info from email b/c some people did not receive

  • #2
    Re: WHO news release:Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office (EMRO) following the conclusion of an inter-country meeting on MERS-CoV nCoV novel coronavirus June 22, 2013

    If the purpose of the three days meeting was the above commitment in routine emerging diseases surveillance, I think there's a continuing lack of ... commitment in slowing the spread of this novel coronavirus.

    Until the basic epidemiological features of the nCov will not be ascertained, it will be difficult to slow the rate of new human infection.

    No a precise word about a possible natural reservoir for the virus, and nothing about environmental persistence (in water, in animals, in faeces, litter, etc.) or food contamination.

    Hospital and public health services in the region are badly affected by both financial cuts (ie southern Europe: Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal, among the others) or civil unrests / wars (Syria, Iraq, West Bank and Gaza, Lebanon, Egypt, Libya, among the others) and basic supplies of materials for PPE are lacking in some areas.

    HCWs could not afford to protect themselves from an airbone respiratory disease (such as nCov or influenza) because of depletion of the stocks and impossibility to replenish them for lack of funding or cut in the chain of trade links.

    Social unrests - massive in the region - and civil wars / occupation / population displacing - seem to be gone out of the head as the above press statement does not make citation of these immediate threats.

    It was repeatedly said that One Health approach, equality in health care access, and other stuff are essential for the wellness of population but in the Middle East area this seems to be immaterial.

    WHO and others must acknowledge that - without peace, safety, equality and rights - there's no mean to stop new and old scourges.

    (GM)

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: WHO news release:Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office (EMRO) following the conclusion of an inter-country meeting on MERS-CoV nCoV novel coronavirus June 22, 2013

      Please let me to add only a single thing.

      The reference to mass gatherings is almost ridiculous: have the meeting convened experts seen the situation in Syria? Have they seen Tahir Square masses? Turkey situation. Yemen, Iraq, Gaza Strip overcrowded dilapidated health care infrastructures?

      (GM)

      Comment

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