WHO confirms coronavirus can be passed between humans
A virus from the same family triggered the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (Sars) that swept the world after emerging in Asia and killed 775 people in 2003.
Yesterday French authorities announced that a second man had been diagnosed with the disease after sharing a hospital room with France’s only other sufferer.
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Hide AdWHO assistant director-general Keiji Fukuda told reporters in Saudi Arabia, the site of the largest cluster of infections, there was no evidence so far the virus was able to sustain “generalised transmission in communities” – a scenario that would raise the spectre of a pandemic.
But he added: “Of most concern … is the fact that the different clusters seen in multiple countries … increasingly supporting the hypothesis that when there is close contact, this novel coronavirus can transmit from person to person. There is a need for countries to … increase levels of awareness,” he said.
The virus first emerged in the Gulf last year, but deaths have also been recorded in Britain and France of people who had recently been in the Middle East.