Off the wire
Roundup: Call for commercial developments of Cypriot port receives warm feedback  • Car bomb kills at least 4 in Syria's southern province  • Taiwan's jobless rate drops to 15-year low  • Benin's gov't, opposition in race for control of local authorities  • News Analysis: Asian container shipping to remain weak till next year  • Hamas slams Israel's threats to intercept Gaza-bound aid flotilla  • Roundup: Taliban attack on Afghan parliament widely condemned  • Roundup: Athens Stock Exchange rise as crucial Brussels talks on Greek debt deal underway  • Revenues in German manufacturing to rise in 2015: Ifo survey  • News Analysis: Italy watches closely as Greek negotiations come to a head  
You are here:   Home

Thailand still faces risk of MERS: official

Xinhua, June 22, 2015 Adjust font size:

Thailand is still facing risks posed by the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) while the country's first confirmed infectee is now in better condition, a health official said Monday.

The risk of the virus spreading in the kingdom remains due to the inflow of visitors from at-risk countries, including tourists who come to Thailand to seek medical treatment, deputy permanent secretary for public health Wachira Pengjan said.

The health authorities will closely monitor and quarantine MERS suspects categorized as "at high risk," while those deemed "at low risk" will only be placed under close monitoring, Wachira said.

Hospitals have been instructed not to accept medical tourists from overseas unless they pass MERS tests first, he added.

According to the official, Thailand's first and so far only confirmed MERS patient, a 75-year-old man from Oman, is recovering at an infectious diseases institute in central Nonthaburi province.

The patient is now able to eat and reportedly has no fever, Wachira said, adding his three relatives, who traveled to Thailand with him, tested negative for the virus. Endi