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			 The complaint came as Zika cases mounted in some of the state's most 
			popular tourist destinations and some residents pushed for more 
			information. 
 On Wednesday, the Florida Department of Health reported a second 
			non-travel related case of Zika in Palm Beach County, bringing the 
			state's total to 43.
 
 That followed Tuesday's announcement of Florida's first case of Zika 
			transmitted by mosquitoes in Pinellas County, 265 miles (425 km) 
			from Miami where the first locally transmitted U.S. cases were 
			reported.
 
 Health officials warned pregnant women last week not to travel to 
			Miami Beach after Florida confirmed the mosquito-borne Zika virus 
			was active there, becoming the second area in Miami to be affected 
			after Wynwood.
 
 The Zika virus was first detected in Brazil last year and has since 
			spread across the Americas. The virus poses a risk to pregnant women 
			because it can cause severe birth defects. It has been linked to 
			more than 1,800 cases of microcephaly in Brazil.
 
			
			 
			In a teleconference on Wednesday, Scott made a plea for more support 
			in fighting Zika, complaining that "Congress and the White House 
			have not been good partners."
 Scott said he asked the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and 
			Prevention for 5,000 Zika antibody tests last week, but so far had 
			only received less than 1,200. He had also asked for additional lab 
			support personnel to speed testing.
 
 Scott also said the state had asked the CDC for 10,000 Zika 
			prevention kits for pregnant women, which had not been provided. It 
			has also asked the White House for a detailed plan on how to work 
			with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which he said had not 
			been provided.
 
 CDC spokesman Tom Skinner said the agency had been responding to 
			Florida's requests.
 
 "CDC has and will continue to provide the support to Florida to 
			address the Zika outbreak. We've provided millions in federal funds, 
			deployed personnel and we've shipped materials for testing and more 
			for testing still to come," Skinner said in an email.
 
 NEEDING INFORMATION
 
 In a Miami Beach neighborhood on Wednesday, workers from the Florida 
			Department of Health went door to door to talk to residents about 
			the virus and offer voluntary tests.
 
 Among the area residents was 32-year-old jogger Jen Cheek, who said 
			health workers told her they would respond by email to her inquiries 
			about the speed of the virus' spread.
 
			
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			"There's a lot of people in my life right now who have young 
			children or are pregnant," said Cheek. "We need as much information 
			as possible."
 Scott made some of the same complaints about the CDC last week, 
			including the request for 10,000 Zika prevention kits.
 
 Asked about delays in delivering the kits in a conference call on 
			Friday, CDC Director Thomas Frieden said the agency had already 
			provided 10,000 products containing the insect repellant DEET for 
			use in Florida.
 
 Frieden said the Zika prevention kits contained a number of products 
			that would not necessarily be useful in Florida. In addition to 
			insect repellent, the kits include bed nets, larvicide tablets and 
			condoms.
 
			"We sent the state of Florida more than $35 million for Zika and 
			other emergencies. That includes funds to purchase the other 
			products they might want in a Zika prevention kit," he said.
 As for the request on Friday of 5,000 antibody test kits, Frieden 
			said: "We've already arranged for them and they will begin shipping 
			on Tuesday." The CDC said in a statement late on Wednesday that it 
			planned another shipment of antibody test kits for Thursday, giving 
			Florida the ability to conduct 6,300 Zika antibody tests.
 
 Frieden also said the CDC had provided Florida laboratories with 
			technical support.
 
 As for the new case in Palm Beach County, Scott said he believed it 
			was not related to an earlier non-travel related case announced 
			earlier in the same county.
 
 (Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen and Zachary Fagenson in Miami; 
			additonal reporting by Anna Driver in New York; Editing by Bernard 
			Orr and Peter Cooney)
 
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