Too
costly for Indonesia to thoroughly test for Zika: health
official
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[September 06, 2016]
By Kanupriya Kapoor and Glenys Kirana
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia can not
afford to thoroughly check for a possible Zika outbreak, a health
ministry official said, as Southeast Asia's most populous country must
focus on fighting dengue, a potentially fatal virus also carried by
mosquitoes.
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The World Health Organisation (WHO) lists Indonesia among Asian
countries with possible endemic transmission of, or evidence of,
local Zika infections, but authorities in the sprawling nation of
250 million people have yet to report any recent infections.
Both dengue and Zika are spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which
is common across Southeast Asia. Neighboring Singapore has over the
past week said it detected more than 240 Zika cases while Malaysia
reported its first locally transmitted infection on Saturday.
The Philippines confirmed on Monday its first case of Zika this year
and said it was "highly likely" it had been locally transmitted.
"At the moment we cannot go out there and test everybody or every
suspected case for Zika because it is too costly," Muhamad Subuh,
director general for disease prevention and control at Indonesia's
health ministry, told Reuters.
"There are other priorities like dengue fever, which is more
prevalent and more dangerous, and we have to allocate our resources
accordingly."
Like many of its neighbors, Indonesia records thousands of dengue
infections a year.
Indonesia is Southeast Asia's biggest economy but the World Bank
estimates the government spends 5.7 percent of its gross domestic
product on public health, which works out to $99 per person per
year, compared with $459 in Malaysia, the region's third largest
economy.
Subuh said the ministry was actively monitoring for Zika, but
experts said authorities would struggle to identify patients as few
hospitals offered Zika testing, and those that did expected patients
to pay more than $150 for a test, putting it out of reach of many
ordinary Indonesians
"The biggest challenge right now is that we may miss Zika-infected
patients because of lack of facilities and testing," said Tedjo
Sasmono, a scientist at Jakarta's Eijkman Institute, one of only two
facilities in Indonesia capable of diagnosing Zika.
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The institute receives no government funding specifically for Zika
and relies on funds from private hospitals, he said.
Most people who are infected with Zika have mild symptoms but
infections in pregnant women have been shown to cause microcephaly -
a severe birth defect in which the head and brain are undersized -
as well as other brain abnormalities.
In adults, Zika infections have also been linked to a rare
neurological syndrome known as Guillain-Barre, as well as other
neurological disorders.
Regional experts say the spread of Zika across Southeast Asia is
likely to remain significantly under-reported as health authorities
fail to conduct adequate screening.
(Additional reporting by Randy Fabi in Jakarta; Editing by Miral
Fahmy, Robert Birsel)
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