Amid MERS deaths, Saudi health minister fired - Action News
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Health

Amid MERS deaths, Saudi health minister fired

Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah sacked the country's health minister on Monday amid a spike in deaths and infections from the virus known as the Middle East respiratory syndrome, or MERS.

Death toll from Middle East respiratory syndrome hits 79

A man, wearing a surgical mask as a precautionary measure against the MERS virus, walks near a hospital in Khobar city in Dammam, Saudi Arabia, in May 2013. There have been 79 deaths in Saudi Arabia attributed to MERS since the new coronavirus was identified by scientists in September 2012. (Reuters)

Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah sacked the country's health minister on Monday amid a spike in deaths and infections from the virus known as the Middle East respiratory syndrome, or MERS.

A royal order carried by the state news agency said Abdullah al-Rabiah was relieved of his post as health minister, and that Labor Minister Adel Faqih would temporarily lead the Health Ministry until a replacement is named. The statement said al-Rabiah will now serve as an adviser to the Royal Court.

No reasons were given for the move, but it comes as the kingdom is scrambling to contain the spread of thecoronavirusrelated to SARS. The Health Ministry says 79 people have died and more than 240 have been infected by the virus since 2012.

Saudi officials are struggling to alleviate concerns that the virus is spreading. There is no vaccine or treatment for the virus, and it is still unclear how it is transmitted.

A day beforeal-Rabiahwas fired, he held a press conference to stress that the kingdom was taking sufficient measures and doing its utmost to deal with the virus.

MERSbelongs to a family of viruses known ascoronavirusesthat include both the common cold and SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, which killed some 800 people in a global outbreak in 2003.MERScan cause symptoms such as fever, breathing problems, pneumonia and kidney failure.

The Saudi Health Ministry will host nearly two dozen experts this weekend from international bodies, such as the World Health Organization, who have experience dealing with epidemics.

An outbreak among health workers prompted authorities to shut down the emergency ward of one of the largest hospitals in the city ofJiddahfor 48 hours earlier this month.

The ministry reported the most recent deaths late Sunday: a 49-year-oldJiddahresident; a 68-year-old from the southernNajranregion; and another 68-year-old from the area around the western city of Medina.

The deaths were among 13 new cases reported in the kingdom.