An obstetrician and gynecologist who is herself pregnant, Maguire
has become scrupulous about following the advice that she gives
patients to protect against Zika, which can cause a rare but
devastating birth defect. Maguire works near the city's Wynwood
neighborhood identified on Friday as the first site of local Zika
transmission in the continental United States.
"It is frustrating to spend a lot of time avoiding mosquitoes," said
Maguire, a physician at the University of Miami Miller School of
Medicine, noting the discomfort of wearing long sleeves during
Florida's steamy summer. "You just end up being inside a lot."
Physicians in Miami and beyond have seen this week a spike in
concerned calls from pregnant women, particularly after health
officials advised them not to travel to Wynwood and said any
expecting mothers who had done so since mid-June should be tested
for Zika.
On Wednesday, Florida said it would provide Zika testing to pregnant
women at county health departments at no cost, and make available
additional lab services to handle "the expected increase in tests
being administered."
The warnings raised anxiety in a city already on high alert for
Zika's arrival from Latin America, where it has spread quickly since
first being detected in Brazil last year. The threat to newborns
aside, Zika is otherwise considered a mild illness, and up to 80
percent of people infected have no symptoms.
All summer, Florida health officials have issued daily notices
tallying the rise in cases acquired through travel to countries
where Zika is widespread and advised the public to protect against
mosquito bites. Along with 15 local cases, Florida is monitoring 391
picked up through travel abroad, which include 55 cases involving
pregnant women.
One baby born in the state to a woman infected in Haiti has been
diagnosed with the birth defect microcephaly, a condition defined by
small head size that can lead to developmental problems.
TAILORING THE MESSAGE
Health officials expect that southern U.S. states vulnerable to
mosquito-borne disease will see smaller, localized Zika outbreaks,
given widespread use of window screens and air conditioning,
compared with Latin American countries.
In Miami's trendy Wynwood district, known as a place to hop between
art galleries and tour outdoor murals, some doctors fear that a
counterculture ethos may diminish the impact of medical
recommendations to combat Zika.
Batsheva Stern, who is 28 weeks pregnant, sees no reason to avoid
the district, where her husband, Zak, owns a popular bakery.
[to top of second column] |
"I'm not so nervous," said Stern, 27, recounting the advice of her
midwife: "Don't freak out, nothing is happening."
But Dr. Elizabeth Etkin-Kramer, a gynecologist in private practice
nearby, worries about birth defects resulting from unplanned
pregnancies in some of her Wynwood-area patients who eschew birth
control pills, noting the community is also skeptical of vaccines
and antibiotics.
On Tuesday, she met with a patient who is 18 weeks pregnant and
working near the affected area. The patient questioned her
recommendation to be tested for Zika infection.
"Her feeling is, if something is going on, there is nothing you can
do about it, short of termination," said Etkin-Kramer, an officer in
the Florida district of the American Congress of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists. "I think it would be important to know, and if God
forbid she is positive, then we can look closely by ultrasound and
get a lot more information."
Beatriz Mendes Pereira Lopes, 26, an attorney who is five months
pregnant, has moved twice trying to avoid Zika. She went to Miami in
April, as the hot months in her home of Brazil spurred mosquito
breeding.
Last month, she returned to Brazil, now in its cooler winter,
anticipating its mosquitoes would be in hibernation. Now that Zika
has begun circulating in Miami, she concedes that her future options
may be limited until a vaccine is developed.
"It's impossible to get rid of all the world's mosquitoes," she said
via email.
(Reporting by Letitia Stein in Tampa, Fla. and Jilian Mincer in New
York; Additional reporting by Zachary Fagenson in Miami; Editing by
Michele Gershberg and Bernard Orr)
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