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Spread of MERS is a ‘wake-up call’

World Health Organization (WHO) Assistant Director­General for Health Security Keiji Fukuda, left, talks with Dr. Lee Jong-koo, director of Seoul National University's JW LEE Center for Global Medicine, during a press conference about MERS at the Sejong Government Complex in Sejong, south of Seoul, South Korea Saturday, June 13, 2015. Experts from WHO and South Korea on Saturday downplayed concerns about the MERS virus spreading further within the country, but added that it was premature to declare the outbreak over.
World Health Organization (WHO) Assistant Director­General for Health Security Keiji Fukuda, left, talks with Dr. Lee Jong-koo, director of Seoul National University's JW LEE Center for Global Medicine, during a press conference about MERS at the Sejong Government Complex in Sejong, south of Seoul, South Korea Saturday, June 13, 2015. Experts from WHO and South Korea on Saturday downplayed concerns about the MERS virus spreading further within the country, but added that it was premature to declare the outbreak over. Bae Jae-man/Yonhap via AP

LONDON – The World Health Organization says the spread of a mysterious virus from the Middle East to South Korea doesn’t merit being declared a global emergency despite infecting more than 150 people in the biggest outbreak outside the Arabian peninsula.

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In a statement issued Wednesday, the U.N. health agency called the epidemic “a wake-up call” and warned all countries to prepare for potential outbreaks of the Middle East respiratory syndrome, or MERS.

Nearly three years after MERS was identified, scientists are still unsure how people are catching it or where it originated, although they suspect the disease is linked to camels. WHO recommends that people avoid contact with the animals, not drink camel milk or urine and only eat camel meat that has been well-cooked.

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