The Star Malaysia

‘South-East Asia must up its game to combat Zika’

- BANGKOK/KUALA LUMPUR:

The spread of the Zika virus across tropical South-East Asia is likely to be significan­tly under-reported as local health authoritie­s fail to conduct adequate screening, regional experts said.

Internatio­nal travel hub Singapore confirmed 41 locallycas­es of the mosquito-borne virus on Sunday and said it anticipate­d more, raising fears about how quickly it could disperse throughout the region.

Other parts of South-East Asia have reported dozens of cases of Zika, which in Brazil has been linked to thousands of suspected cases of microcepha­ly, a rare birth defect, but there are fears the true numbers are masked.

“Zika is under-reported and under-diagnosed,” Khin Myint, head of the emerging virus research unit at Indonesia's government-funded Eijkman Institute, said.

“We find many cases are not presented in hospitals because it’s a relatively mild disease with mild symptoms and people are not going to doctors.”

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) lists Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippine­s and Vietnam as countries with “possible endemic transmissi­on or evidence of local mosquito-borne Zika infections in 2016”.

But the Jakarta-based Eijkman Institute, the main body testing for Zika in Indonesia, said it tested only 1,000 people in the past year – a tiny number in South-East Asia’s most populous country. It found just one positive case, despite reports that Zika is prevalent in the country.

Thailand has recorded the highest number of cases in the region at almost 100 infected people across 10 provinces this year.

“Thailand’s surveys have not been thorough enough,” said Kriengsak Limkittiku­l, assistant professor at the Department of Tropical Medicine at Mahidol University in Bangkok, noting that people without symptoms are often not tested.

“Screening is inadequate in other countries in the region, too, where health authoritie­s are ill-equipped to test,” he said.

Vietnam has recorded three cases of Zika infection, all locally-transmitte­d, while Cambodia has reported seven cases.

Hong Kong confirmed its first case of Zika on Friday, in a woman who had travelled to the Caribbean.

A major difficulty is that while Zika can cause mild fever, a rash and red eyes, an estimated 80% of people infected have no symptoms.

There is no vaccine or treatment for Zika, which is a close cousin of dengue and chikunguny­a and is transmitte­d by mosquito.

There have also been a small number of cases of sexual transmissi­on reported in the United States and elsewhere.

Some countries in the region began ramping up protective measures following the outbreak in Singapore.

Muhamad Subuh, a senior Indonesian health ministry official, said authoritie­s are “in the process of stepping up health checks at main airports and ports, including in Batam”, the island closest to Singapore.

Indonesia introduced thermal scanners at airports targeting arrivals from Singapore over the weekend, and plans to roll them out to ports. — Reuters

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