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		 Local 
		Zika outbreaks in United States 'likely': U.S. official 
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		[April 18, 2016] 
		By Diane Bartz
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States 
		is likely to see outbreaks of the Zika virus, with perhaps dozens or 
		scores of people affected, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S. 
		National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, on Sunday.
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			 The United States has seen more than 350 cases of people who were 
			infected abroad and then returned to the country but has yet to 
			confirm a case where someone was infected within its borders. That 
			is likely to change, said Fauci. 
 "It is likely we will have what is called a local outbreak," he said 
			on Fox News Sunday with Chris Wallace.
 
 The Zika outbreak was first detected in Brazil last year and is 
			spreading through the Americas. It has been linked to thousands of 
			cases of microcephaly, a typically rare birth defect marked by 
			unusually small head size which often indicates poor brain 
			development. The World Health Organization declared a global health 
			emergency in February.
 
 
			
			 
			Zika, which is spread by mosquitoes and through sexual contact, can 
			give adults the paralyzing Guillain-Barre syndrome. The Aedes 
			aegypti mosquito, which primarily transmits disease, is present in 
			about 30 U.S. states.
 
 Fauci said he expected to see someone bitten by a mosquito here 
			contract Zika but did not expect a large number of people to fall 
			ill.
 
 "It would not be surprising at all - if not likely - that we're 
			going to see a bit of that," he said. "We're talking about scores of 
			cases, dozens of cases, at most."
 
 He also raised the prospect that other neurological ailments could 
			be eventually linked to Zika, which he called "disturbing."
 
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			"There are only individual case reports of significant neurological 
			damage to people not just the fetuses but an adult that would get 
			infected. Things that they call meningoencephalitis, which is an 
			inflammation of the brain and the covering around the brain, spinal 
			cord damage due to what we call myelitis," he said. "So far they 
			look unusual, but at least we've seen them and that's concerning."
 Fauci also pressed the administration's case for budgeting $1.9 
			billion dollars in emergency funds to fight the virus. Some 
			Republicans have agreed.
 
 "We have to act now," he said. "I can't wait to start developing a 
			vaccine."
 
 Still, Fauci refrained from recommending that U.S. women avoid 
			becoming pregnant because of fear of giving birth to a baby with 
			microcephaly.
 
 "Right now in the United States they should not be that concerned. 
			We do not have local outbreaks," he said.
 
 (Reporting by Diane Bartz, editing by Louise Heavens)
 
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