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Potential for the International Spread of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in Association with Mass Gatherings in Saudi Arabia

Background: A novel coronavirus (MERS-CoV) causing severe, life-threatening respiratory disease has emerged in the Middle East at a time when two international mass gatherings in Saudi Arabia are imminent. While MERS-CoV has already spread to and within other countries, these mass gatherings could f...

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Autores principales: Khan, Kamran, Sears, Jennifer, Hu, Vivian Wei, Brownstein, John S, Hay, Simon, Kossowsky, David, Eckhardt, Rose, Chim, Tina, Berry, Isha, Bogoch, Isaac, Cetron, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3714242/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23884087
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/currents.outbreaks.a7b70897ac2fa4f79b59f90d24c860b8
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author Khan, Kamran
Sears, Jennifer
Hu, Vivian Wei
Brownstein, John S
Hay, Simon
Kossowsky, David
Eckhardt, Rose
Chim, Tina
Berry, Isha
Bogoch, Isaac
Cetron, Martin
author_facet Khan, Kamran
Sears, Jennifer
Hu, Vivian Wei
Brownstein, John S
Hay, Simon
Kossowsky, David
Eckhardt, Rose
Chim, Tina
Berry, Isha
Bogoch, Isaac
Cetron, Martin
author_sort Khan, Kamran
collection PubMed
description Background: A novel coronavirus (MERS-CoV) causing severe, life-threatening respiratory disease has emerged in the Middle East at a time when two international mass gatherings in Saudi Arabia are imminent. While MERS-CoV has already spread to and within other countries, these mass gatherings could further amplify and/or accelerate its international dissemination, especially since the origins and geographic source of the virus remain poorly understood. Methods: We analyzed 2012 worldwide flight itinerary data and historic Hajj pilgrim data to predict population movements out of Saudi Arabia and the broader Middle East to help cities and countries assess their potential for MERS-CoV importation. We compared the magnitude of travel to countries with their World Bank economic status and per capita healthcare expenditures as surrogate markers of their capacity for timely detection of imported MERS-CoV and their ability to mount an effective public health response. Results: 16.8 million travelers flew on commercial flights out of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates between June and November 2012, of which 51.6% were destined for India (16.3%), Egypt (10.4%), Pakistan (7.8%), the United Kingdom (4.3%), Kuwait (3.6%), Bangladesh (3.1%), Iran (3.1%) and Bahrain (2.9%). Among the 1.74 million foreign pilgrims who performed the Hajj last year, an estimated 65.1% originated from low and lower-middle income countries. Conclusion: MERS-CoV is an emerging pathogen with pandemic potential with its apparent epicenter in Saudi Arabia, where millions of pilgrims will imminently congregate for two international mass gatherings. Understanding global population movements out of the Middle East through the end of this year's Hajj could help direct anticipatory MERS-CoV surveillance and public health preparedness to mitigate its potential global health and economic impacts.
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spelling pubmed-37142422013-07-23 Potential for the International Spread of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in Association with Mass Gatherings in Saudi Arabia Khan, Kamran Sears, Jennifer Hu, Vivian Wei Brownstein, John S Hay, Simon Kossowsky, David Eckhardt, Rose Chim, Tina Berry, Isha Bogoch, Isaac Cetron, Martin PLoS Curr Research Background: A novel coronavirus (MERS-CoV) causing severe, life-threatening respiratory disease has emerged in the Middle East at a time when two international mass gatherings in Saudi Arabia are imminent. While MERS-CoV has already spread to and within other countries, these mass gatherings could further amplify and/or accelerate its international dissemination, especially since the origins and geographic source of the virus remain poorly understood. Methods: We analyzed 2012 worldwide flight itinerary data and historic Hajj pilgrim data to predict population movements out of Saudi Arabia and the broader Middle East to help cities and countries assess their potential for MERS-CoV importation. We compared the magnitude of travel to countries with their World Bank economic status and per capita healthcare expenditures as surrogate markers of their capacity for timely detection of imported MERS-CoV and their ability to mount an effective public health response. Results: 16.8 million travelers flew on commercial flights out of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates between June and November 2012, of which 51.6% were destined for India (16.3%), Egypt (10.4%), Pakistan (7.8%), the United Kingdom (4.3%), Kuwait (3.6%), Bangladesh (3.1%), Iran (3.1%) and Bahrain (2.9%). Among the 1.74 million foreign pilgrims who performed the Hajj last year, an estimated 65.1% originated from low and lower-middle income countries. Conclusion: MERS-CoV is an emerging pathogen with pandemic potential with its apparent epicenter in Saudi Arabia, where millions of pilgrims will imminently congregate for two international mass gatherings. Understanding global population movements out of the Middle East through the end of this year's Hajj could help direct anticipatory MERS-CoV surveillance and public health preparedness to mitigate its potential global health and economic impacts. Public Library of Science 2013-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3714242/ /pubmed/23884087 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/currents.outbreaks.a7b70897ac2fa4f79b59f90d24c860b8 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research
Khan, Kamran
Sears, Jennifer
Hu, Vivian Wei
Brownstein, John S
Hay, Simon
Kossowsky, David
Eckhardt, Rose
Chim, Tina
Berry, Isha
Bogoch, Isaac
Cetron, Martin
Potential for the International Spread of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in Association with Mass Gatherings in Saudi Arabia
title Potential for the International Spread of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in Association with Mass Gatherings in Saudi Arabia
title_full Potential for the International Spread of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in Association with Mass Gatherings in Saudi Arabia
title_fullStr Potential for the International Spread of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in Association with Mass Gatherings in Saudi Arabia
title_full_unstemmed Potential for the International Spread of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in Association with Mass Gatherings in Saudi Arabia
title_short Potential for the International Spread of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in Association with Mass Gatherings in Saudi Arabia
title_sort potential for the international spread of middle east respiratory syndrome in association with mass gatherings in saudi arabia
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3714242/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23884087
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/currents.outbreaks.a7b70897ac2fa4f79b59f90d24c860b8
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