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Singapore confirms 41 cases of locally transmitte­d Zika virus

- Regional risk

SINGAPORE: Singapore authoritie­s have confirmed 41 cases of locally transmitte­d Zika virus, which in Brazil has been linked to a rare birth defect, and said more cases were expected to be identified.

Those infected include 36 foreign constructi­on workers employed at a site near Aljunied in the southeast of the island, the health ministry and the National Environmen­t Agency (NEA) said in a joint statement on Sunday.

On Saturday, authoritie­s had confirmed Singapore’s first case of a local transmissi­on of the virus, to a 47-year-old Malaysian woman, also from the Aljunied area.

“MOH (the ministry of health) cannot rule out further community transmissi­on in Singapore since some of those tested positive also live or work in other parts of Singapore,” the statement said. “We expect to identify more positive cases.”

The authoritie­s said they have tested 124 people, primarily constructi­on workers. Seventy-eight tested negative and five cases were pending. Thirty-four patients have fully recovered. It was not immediatel­y clear where the foreign workers were from, but Singapore hosts a large contingent of workers from the Asian sub-continent.

“All the cases are residents or workers in the Aljunied Crescent/ Sims Drive area. They are not known to have traveled to Zikaaffect­ed areas recently, and are thus likely to have been infected in Singapore. This confirms that local transmissi­on of Zika virus infection has taken place,” the statement said.

Dozens of NEA staff cleaned drains and sprayed insecticid­e in the mainly residentia­l area early on Sunday, and volunteers and contractor­s handed out leaflets and insect repellent. The NEA workers had accessed more than 1,800 premises of a total of 6,000 in the area to check for mosquito breeding.

Local residents welcomed the clean-up.

“I’m very scared of mosquitoes because they always seem to bite me, they never bite my husband,” Janice, 31, who gave only her first name, told Reuters. “This concerns me because maybe in a couple of years I want to have another (child).”

Zika was detected in Brazil last year and has since spread across the Americas. The virus poses a risk to pregnant women because it can cause severe birth defects. It has been linked to more than 1,600 cases of microcepha­ly in Brazil.

The Singapore government said there were “ongoing local transmissi­on” cases in Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam. Other countries in the region to have detected the Zika virus since 2013 include Bangladesh, Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia, Maldives and the Philippine­s, according to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

Malaysia said on Sunday it stepped up surveillan­ce at main transit points with Singapore.

Health director-general Noor Hisham Abdullah said leaflets on Zika prevention were being handed out and paramedics were at entry points to handle visitors with potential symptoms.

As of this month, Malaysia said it has screened more than 2 million visitors at air, sea and land entrances, and found no Zika infections.

In Thailand, where close to 100 cases of Zika have been recorded across 10 provinces this year, the Department of Disease Control ( DDC) was screening all athletes returning from the Olympic Games in Brazil, but was not otherwise changing its prevention measures.

“Every country in this region has Zika transmissi­on cases,” said Prasert Thongcharo­en, an adviser to the DDC. “Thailand has, however, managed to contain the problem through early detection.”

Indonesian foreign ministry spokesman Armanatha Nasir said the country was “following developmen­ts.” Oskar Pribadi, a health ministry official, said there have been no recent Zika cases.

Vietnam has to date reported three cases of locally-transmitte­d Zika infection.

 ??  ?? PRECAUTION­S: Workers fogging in the housing estate at Aljunied Crescent in Singapore in this photo by Strait Times on Sunday. (AFP)
PRECAUTION­S: Workers fogging in the housing estate at Aljunied Crescent in Singapore in this photo by Strait Times on Sunday. (AFP)

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