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Third family member has 'Sars-like virus' | |
(35 minutes later) | |
By James Gallagher Health and science reporter, BBC News | |
A third member of a family in the UK has been infected with a new respiratory illness similar to the deadly Sars virus, officials say. | A third member of a family in the UK has been infected with a new respiratory illness similar to the deadly Sars virus, officials say. |
It strengthens evidence that the virus can spread between people, however experts say the risk to the general population remains small. | |
Of the 12 people confirmed to have the virus, five have died. | |
This case appears to be a milder form of the infection and the patient is not being treated in hospital. | This case appears to be a milder form of the infection and the patient is not being treated in hospital. |
The infection is thought to come from contact with animals. However, if the virus can spread between people it poses a much more serious threat. | |
This is the fourth case identified in the UK. The first was a patient flown in from Qatar for treatment. The second was linked to travel to the Middle East and Pakistan. | |
The virus is then thought to have spread from the second patient to his son and another member of the family. | |
Low risk | |
Prof John Watson, head of the respiratory diseases department at the Health Protection Agency, said: "Although this patient had a mild form of respiratory illness, as a precaution the HPA is advising that the patient self-isolate and limit contact with non-household members. | |
"Although this case appears to be due to person-to-person transmission, the risk of infection in contacts in most circumstances is still considered to be low." | |
Other people who came into contact with the family are being tested. | |
The exact source of the new virus and how it spreads is still unknown. The leading theory is that it comes from animals and the new Sars-like virus does also appear to be closely related to a virus in bats. | |
However, if the infection needs to jump from an animal to a person with each infection, the threat would be much lower. | |
The World Health Organization reported cases from within the same family in Saudi Arabia in November 2012. | |
It was impossible to tell whether each patient caught the infection separately - or if it had spread between them. | |
Earlier this week Prof John Oxford, a virology expert at Queen Mary, University of London, said: "In a family things can spread far more easily than they would spread outside, people share towels and toothbrushes etc. | |
"If it was somebody who was not related or a nurse or a doctor - that would be a lot more serious." |
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