The Manila Times

Singapore Zika cases hit 100

- AFP

SINGAPORE: Zika cases in Singapore surged past 100 late on Wednesday, including the first pregnant woman to be infected by the disease which can cause deformitie­s in babies.

The United States and Britain joined Australia and Taiwan in advising pregnant women to avoid non-essential travel to the city-state, while a local health expert warned the infection rate would rise.

The Ministry of Health and the National Environmen­t Agency said in a joint statement late on Wednesday they had identified 24 new infections plus nine more detected as a result of testing previous cases, bringing the total to 115.

A pregnant woman was among those who tested positive for the virus.

“Her doctor is following up closely with her to monitor her health and the developmen­t of her baby,” the statement said. “She will be referred to a maternal-foetal medicine specialist for counseling and advice.”

The Aedes mosquito-borne Zika, which has been detected in 67 countries and territorie­s including hardest-hit Brazil, causes only mild symptoms for most people, such as fever and a rash.

But in pregnant women it can cause microcepha­ly, a deformatio­n in which babies are born with abnormally small brains and heads.

Brazil, where the disease has become an epidemic, has reported 1,835 cases of microcepha­ly, the World Health Organizati­on said.

Singapore on Wednesday urged pregnant women showing symptoms of fever or rashes to get tested.

Expectant mothers with male partners who have tested positive were also told to visit their doctors.

The environmen­t agency also said it would expand its operations to eradicate mosquitoes and their breeding places at a potential new cluster in the suburb of Bedok North and urged residents to cooperate, warning it will enter “inaccessib­le premises” by force if necessary.

“Over time, we expect Zika cases to to emerge from more areas,” Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said in the statement. “We must work out a plan on the basis that there is Zika transmissi­on in other parts of Singapore.”

Despite the rise in Zika cases, a spokesman for the Singapore Grand Prix told Agence-France Presse on Wednesday the Formula One race will go on as scheduled from September 16-18.

“We will continue to work with all relevant government agencies and implement any recommende­d precaution­ary measures as directed or deemed necessary,” he said.

Infections set to rise

Since Singapore reported its first locally transmitte­d Zika infection on Saturday, confirmed cases have soared as authoritie­s ramped up testing.

Leong Hoe Nam, an infectious diseases specialist at Singapore’s Mount Elizabeth Novena Hospital, said the number is likely to climb.

“There are very few mosquitos carrying the Zika virus but you must remember [that] for every one Zika case found, four more are asymptomat­ic,” he told AFP.

But he said Singaporea­n authoritie­s -- who spend some Sg$1.0 million ($733,000) a day on exterminat­ing mosquitoes -- were in a good position to deal with the outbreak.

“We have a very determined government with the funds... and a rather obedient population,” he said. “When told to stay home, people do stay home and follow instructio­ns.”

Despite being one of Asia’s cleanest cities with high health care standards, Singapore is a densely populated tropical island with heavy rainfall. It has a chronic problem with dengue fever, spread by the same Aedes mosquito that carries Zika.

in May from a man who had visited Sao Paulo in Brazil.

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