A total of 87 people in South Korea have been infected by MERS since last month in the largest outbreak outside the Middle East.
About 1,870 schools have closed and more than 2,000 people are isolated at their homes or state-run facilities after having contact with patients infected with the virus.
An 80-year-old man, who tested positive for the virus last week while being treated for pneumonia, died today and became the country's sixth death linked to MERS, according to a statement from the Health Ministry.
This will allow people who have visited those facilities in recent weeks to report themselves if they are showing symptoms similar to MERS-related illnesses, officials said.
The government had earlier refused to reveal the names of those hospitals saying it would cause a disruption in services if people started avoiding them.
The disclosure came two days after the government first identified one hospital at the heart of the virus's outbreak in South Korea.
"So far, all the MERS cases have been hospital-associated, and there has been no case of an infection in other social settings. We think we have a chance at putting the outbreak under total control," Choi said.
The virus has no vaccine, and health experts say it spreads through close contact with infected people and not through the air.
The UN health agency has reported that there's no evidence yet in South Korea of "sustained transmission in the community."
MERS was discovered in 2012 and has mostly been centred in Saudi Arabia. It belongs to the family of coronaviruses that includes the common cold and SARS, and can cause fever, breathing problems, pneumonia and kidney failure.
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