Off the wire
Majority of Democrats want Sanders to stay in race despite Clinton's lead: poll  • Morocco designs approach to implement development plans  • U.S. stocks tumble amid earnings, falling oil  • Rwanda youth urged to venture into agribusiness  • U.S. dollar rises after sharp decline  • British manufacturing PMI falls to lowest level in three years  • Chicago agricultural commodities close lower  • Morocco launches new strategy to counter corruption  • IAEA helps repair Libya's only operational radiotherapy machine: UN spokesman  • U.S. stocks retreat amid earnings, falling oil  
You are here:   Home

500 million people at risk of contracting Zika in Americas: PAHO official

Xinhua, May 4, 2016 Adjust font size:

About 500 million people in the Americas are at risk of being infected by the Zika virus, which can cause birth defects such as microcephaly, a senior official from the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said Tuesday.

"It's important to note that all countries which have reported, detected Dengue and Chikungunya virus outbreaks during the last years, that's 15 years, are considered at risk for having outbreaks of Zika," Sylvain Aldighieri, Zika incident manager for PAHO, told reporters here.

"It means that we are expecting outbreaks of Zika from Middle America to Latin America to the north of Argentina and in the Caribbean. So it's a very large portion of territory of the region."

Aldighieri said so far the number of countries and territories in the Americas reporting Zika virus transmission has increased to 47, of which five countries including Brazil have reported microcephaly.

Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told reporters at the briefing that his agency is working to begin a clinical trial for a Zika vaccine in September.

"We will probably know if it's safe by the beginning of 2017," said Fauci. "And if it is, we'll engage in a very large efficacy study likely in South America or in the Caribbean and that should take anywhere from one to three years to prove that it works or does not work."

Zika is transmitted primarily through the bite of an infected Aedes species mosquito, which also spreads chikungunya and dengue.

Symptoms include fever, rash, joint pain and red eyes, but severe disease requiring hospitalization is uncommon and case fatality is low. There is no vaccine or medicine available for the virus. Endit