India
on alert as zika virus hits tourism hotspot of Jaipur
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[October 09, 2018]
By Alasdair Pal
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India has sent
experts to try to contain an outbreak of the zika virus in the popular
tourist destination of Jaipur, capital of the northern state of
Rajasthan, with a close watch on pregnant women.
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Twenty-two people in the city have tested positive, the health
ministry said. There is no vaccine to the virus which can cause
severe birth defects in unborn children.
Pregnant women in the area are being monitored by the National
Health Mission, a body set up by the government to improve
healthcare across the country.
"The situation continues to be monitored regularly," the ministry
said in a statement late on Monday.
The Toronto-based International Association for Medical Assistance
to Travellers said it was advising pregnant travelers to postpone
trips to the area, part of India's tourist "golden triangle" of
Delhi, Jaipur and Agra, home to the Taj Mahal.

First discovered in 1947, the zika virus reached epidemic
proportions in Brazil in 2015, when thousands of babies were born
with microcephaly, a brain defect affecting speech and motor
function.
It is the third such outbreak in India, with the first in the
western city of Ahmedabad in January 2017 and the second in the
southern state of Tamil Nadu in July 2017. Both outbreaks were
"successfully contained", the government said.
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The latest cases - in the middle of the country's festival season
where many Indians travel, increasing the risk of transmission -
come amid a spike in other mosquito-borne diseases, that kill
thousands across India each year, according to the World Health
Organisation.
The capital Delhi has reported a rise in cases of dengue fever, with
169 reported in the first week of October and taking the total for
the year to 650, according to NDTV, citing figures from the South
Delhi Municipal Corporation that tracks mosquito-borne diseases.
(Editing by Sanjeev Miglani and Nick Macfie)
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