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Saudi medical staff leave the emergency department at a hospital in the center of the Saudi capital Riyadh. The health ministry reported four more MERS cases in Jeddah, two of them among health workers, prompting authorities to close the emergency department at the city's King Fahd Hospital. Image Credit: AFP

Jeddah: A foreigner has died from Mers while eight people including five health workers have been infected in the Saudi city of Jeddah, where the spread of the coronavirus among medics has sparked panic.

The death of the 45-year-old man, whose nationality has not been disclosed, brings the nationwide toll in the world’s most-affected country to 68.

The health ministry late on Saturday announced the death of the man and said five health workers — two women and three men — and three other people had been infected by the virus in Jeddah.

The announcement came days after panic over the spread of the virus among medical staff led to the closure of the emergency room at the city’s main public hospital.

Health Minister Abdullah Al Rabiah visited hospitals in Jeddah on Saturday in a bid to calm residents.

He was reassured on the health of the patients and was briefed on the sterilidation units and measures of sterilisation mechanisms.

Al Rabiah stressed in a statement to Saudi Press Agency that the number of cases is still generally low.

He called on residents not to believe rumours or misinformation being spread on social media, and asked the media to take their information from official sources.

The total number of people infected by the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, which first appeared in the kingdom in September 2012, has hit 189, the ministry said.

The virus was initially concentrated in the eastern region but has now spread across more areas.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Friday that it was told of 212 laboratory-confirmed cases of Mers infection worldwide, of which 88 have proved fatal.

The Mers virus is considered a deadlier but less-transmissible cousin of the Sars virus that erupted in Asia in 2003 and infected 8,273 people, nine per cent of whom died.

Experts are still struggling to understand Mers, for which there is no known vaccine.

A study has said the virus has been “extraordinarily common” in camels for at least 20 years, and may have been passed directly from the animals to humans.