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The Korea Herald
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THE INVESTOR
April 24, 2024

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Ministry, Samsung Medical Center seen playing blame game on MERS spread

  • PUBLISHED :January 24, 2017 - 17:44
  • UPDATED :January 24, 2017 - 17:44
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[THE INVESTOR] South Korea’s most prestigious hospital has come at odds with the Ministry of Health and Welfare over who is to blame for the outbreak of a deadly virus in 2015.

Samsung Medical Center in Seoul on Jan. 24 submitted to the ministry a 100-page statement of an argument denying that its missteps contributed to the spread of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome which killed 37 in the summer of 2015.

The move was in response to the ministry’s decision in December to request police authorities to impose a 15-day suspension and a fine of up to 2 million won ($1,715) on the SMC as a punitive measure for its mishandling of MERS patients. Nearly half of all confirmed MERS cases were traced to the SMC.

“We organized and presented our opinion to the ministry, but it does not mean that we agree or disagree with the ministry’s order,” the SMC official told the Korea Herald.

A ministry official, however, said a vast body of the documents appear to be intended at refuting the ministry’s view and defending its responses to the epidemic.

The SMC has been at the epicenter of the MERS outbreak.

Out of a total of 186 MERS patients in South Korea, nearly a half were infected directly or indirectly via the SMC. Some 6,000 people were quarantined nationwide until the nation was declared MERS-free at the end of the year, almost 8 months after the first case was reported.  

According to the ministry, a patient, later found to be a “super-spreader” of the virus, transmitted the dead disease to at least 80 people in the SMC, before being diagnosed and put under quarantine.

Critics, however, point to faults on both sides.

“The SMC, which detected the first case, made a serious mistake and failed to prevent the spread of the virus. But it was the ministry’s decision to not reveal to the public the list of hospitals with the MERS cases,” said a medical industry insider who wished to be unnamed.

During the early stages of the outbreak, the ministry blocked the Korean Hospital Association’s disclosure of a list of hospitals that treated MERS patients, including the SMC, for no clear reason. The ministry later explained that it was to prevent unnecessary public confusion.

The SMC is known as one of the finest medical facilities in the country led by a former head of the Korean Society of Infectious Diseases.

The Chairman of Samsung Group Lee Kun-hee has been hospitalized at the SMC, in a 20th-floor VIP room, since his heart attack in 2014. 

By Kim Da-sol/The Korea Herald (ddd@heraldcorp.com)



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