Zika
virus may infect up to 700,000 people in Colombia: government
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[January 21, 2016]
BOGOTA (Reuters) - The
mosquito-borne Zika virus has already infected more than 13,500 people
in Colombia and could hit as many as 700,000, the health minister said
on Wednesday.
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According to Pan-American Health Organization figures, the country
is second only to Brazil in infection rates, health minister
Alejandro Gaviria told journalists.
"We expect an expansion similar to what we had with the chikungunya
virus last year, to finish with between 600,000 to 700,000 cases,"
Gaviria said.
Some 560 pregnant women are among those infected, the minister said,
though so far no cases of newborns suffering from microcephaly, a
congenital defect caused by zika, have been registered in the
country.
The government is advising Colombian women to delay becoming
pregnant for six to eight months in a bid to avoid potential
infection.
The U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention last week warned
pregnant women to avoid travel to 14 countries, including Colombia,
and territories in the Caribbean and Latin America affected by the
virus.
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(Reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta, writing by Julia Symmes Cobb;
editing by Helen Murphy and David Gregorio)
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