Zika
risk went beyond Florida's Miami-Dade County: U.S.
officials
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[March 14, 2017] By
Julie Steenhuysen
(Reuters) - Local transmission of the Zika
virus in Florida may have occurred as early as June 15 of last year and
likely infected people who lived not only in Miami-Dade County, but in
two nearby counties, U.S. health officials said on Monday.
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The warning means that some men who donated semen to sperm banks in
the area may not have been aware that they were at risk of
infection, and may have donated sperm infected with the Zika virus,
officials from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
and the Food and Drug Administration told reporters in a telephone
briefing.
The information is concerning because Zika has been shown to cause
birth defects in women who become infected while pregnant.
Previously, the CDC had warned of the risk of Zika in Miami-Dade
County, beginning on July 29.
But the new warning dials that risk back to June 15, and adds in
both Broward and Palm Beach Counties, home to the major tourist
destinations of Fort Lauderdale and Palm Beach.
Zika's arrival in Florida last summer followed the rapid spread of
the mosquito-borne virus through Latin America and the Caribbean.
The World Health Organization last year declared Zika a global
health emergency because of its link in Brazil with thousands cases
of the birth defect microcephaly, which is marked by small head size
and underdeveloped brains that can result in severe developmental
problems.
U.S. officials said because of frequent travel between the three
Florida counties, some women may have been infected and not been
aware of it, either through contracting the infection directly from
a mosquito bite while visiting Miami-Dade or through sex with an
infected partner who had.
And because Zika has been shown to last up to three months in semen,
it may mean some men living in the affected counties may have
donated sperm without reporting they were at risk.
CDC Zika expert Dr. Denise Jamieson said the risk applies
"particularly (to) women who became pregnant or are planning to
become pregnant through the use of donor semen." She urged these
women to "consult their healthcare provider to discuss the donation
source and whether Zika virus testing is indicated."
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The new warning came to light through investigations of several
cases of Zika reported by the Florida Health Department late last
year that suggested residents of Palm Beach or Broward counties may
have become infected while traveling back and forth from Miami-Dade.
According to the CDC, a total of 215 people are believed to have
contracted Zika in Florida last year through the bite of a local
mosquito. But since only one in five people infected with Zika
become ill, experts believe the actual number was higher.
Officials said they weren't aware of any women who contracted Zika
from infected semen donated to one of the 12 sperm banks in the
three-county area. There is no approved test for Zika in sperm.
Jamieson said the CDC does not have any new evidence of local Zika
transmission, but said it may occur again in the coming year, adding
that the CDC was "on the lookout for additional cases of Zika."
A recent CDC study estimates that Zika infections cause a
twenty-fold spike in the risk of certain birth defects, including
microcephaly.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago; Editing by Sandra Maler
and Mary Milliken)
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