(Reuters) - Saudi Arabia
has identified 18 new cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS),
it said late on Wednesday, pushing the total number of infections in
the country so far to 449. Four people died from the disease on Wednesday, taking the total death toll in Saudi Arabia to 121 since MERS, a form of coronavirus, was identified two years ago, the Health Ministry said in a statement on its website. The
rate of infection in Saudi Arabia has surged in recent weeks after big
outbreaks associated with hospitals in Jeddah and Riyadh. The total
number of infections nearly doubled in April and has risen by a further
21 percent already in May. The
World Health Organisation said on Wednesday the hospital outbreaks had
been partly due to "breaches" in recommended infection prevention and
control measures, but added that there was no evidence of a change in
the virus's ability to spread. Scientists
around the world have been searching for the animal source, or
reservoir, of MERS virus infections ever since the first human cases
were confirmed in September 2012. In
humans, MERS cause coughing, fever and pneumonia. Cases have so far
been reported in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Jordan, United Arab
Emirates, Malaysia, Oman, Tunisia, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and Britain. Eight
of the new cases were in Jeddah, five in the capital Riyadh, one in
Najran. There were three new cases in Medina and one in Mecca, two
cities that receive large influxes of Muslim pilgrims from around the
country and overseas. Half of them were in contact with people who had previously been diagnosed as having MERS, the ministry said.
Saudi Arabia finds another 18 MERS cases as disease spreads

Reuters
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