Locally
transmitted Zika virus identified in Miami Beach: source
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[August 19, 2016]
By Toni Clarke
(Reuters) - Florida health officials have
found evidence of local Zika virus transmission in Miami Beach, one of
the world's most popular tourist destinations, opening a new front in
the fight against the mosquito-borne virus, according to a source
familiar with the investigation.
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A handful of Zika cases have been identified and health officials
are deciding which area or areas to include in any updated travel
guidance, the source said. An announcement is expected to be made as
early as Friday.
The virus, which has spread rapidly through the Americas since it
was first detected in Brazil last year, can cause the rare birth
defect microcephaly, marked by abnormally small heads and
developmental problems.
A spokeswoman for Florida's health department, Mara Gambineri, said
the department believes active transmissions are still only
occurring in a small area in the Wynwood area of Miami but
acknowledged two new Zika cases outside that area.
"If investigations reveal additional areas of likely active
transmission, the department will announce a defined area of
concern," she said in a statement.
Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine told a press conference late on
Thursday that state and federal health officials have yet to
conclude the tourist hotspot is the latest area where Zika has been
transmitted.
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"We don't know the exact link, one could be a tourist, one could be
someone who may have worked on Miami Beach," Levine told reporters.
"If it was confirmed we'd be able to talk about that, but it's not."
Levine said health department investigations are ongoing, and a
determination could come as soon as Friday.
So far there have been 35 cases of likely local transmission in the
state, including the two new cases announced on Thursday.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention referred calls
to state health officials.
The prospect of the virus spreading to the tourism-dependent Miami
Beach area is likely to alarm tourism officials.
Last year, some 15.5 million people spent at least one night in
Greater Miami and the beaches, generating nearly $24.4 billion in
direct expenditures, according to the Greater Miami Convention &
Visitors Bureau. More than 48 percent of all visitors stayed in
Miami Beach.
Dr. Amesh Adalja, an expert in infectious diseases at the University
of Pittsburgh Medical Center, said it would not be surprising to see
new clusters of Zika cases pop up in different areas or counties of
Florida. Local mosquito populations could pick up the virus from a
person returning from another area where Zika is active.
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He said it is important to alert people as soon as possible if local
transmission is occurring so that pregnant women can protect
themselves and get tested for the virus.
At the same time, he said, "you don't want to jump to conclusions
right away and cause people to panic or stigmatize an area that
doesn't have local transmission."
Earlier this month Florida began aerial spraying of insecticides to
kill mosquitoes in the Wynwood neighborhood. The CDC also issued an
unprecedented warning to pregnant women and their partners to avoid
the area.
It is unclear what kind of mosquito control may be implemented, if
any, in Miami Beach.
The Zika virus has been linked to more than 1,700 cases of
microcephaly in Brazil, raising alarm among public health officials
globally about its spread. The virus can also be spread through sex,
making it unique among mosquito-borne diseases.
President Barack Obama in February requested $1.9 billion to fight
Zika but Congressional efforts to approve part of the funding
deadlocked before lawmakers adjourned for the summer.
(Reporting by Toni Clarke in Washington; Additional reporting by
Letitia Stein in Tampa and Zachary Fagenson in Miami; Editing by
Michele Gershberg, Bernard Orr and Michael Perry)
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