5 new Zika cases hit Florida; officials act
Brazilian study finds risks beyond microcephaly.
ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. — Florida Gov. Rick Scott on Tuesday announced a non-travel-related case of Zika in the Tampa Bay region, the first in the state outside the Miami area.
But Scott said there was not yet enough evidence to declare a new zone of local transmission.
If Department of Health officials conclude mosquitoes have transmitted the disease to people in the Tampa Bay area of Pinellas County, it would the third such area in the continental U.S. following clusters of cases traced to downtown Miami’s Wynwood arts district and a touristy area of Miami Beach.
“While this investigation is ongoing, DOH still believes that ongoing active transmissions are only occurring in the two previously identified areas in Wynwood and Miami Beach,” Scott said.
Scott spoke during a Zika roundtable in Clearwater, near Tampa. He also said four new cases were connected to mosquitoes in Miami’s Wynwood arts district. A fifth new case was diagnosed in a Pinellas County resident who hasn’t traveled internationally. Officials are looking into the possibility that the Pinellas County resident was infected with the virus in a neighboring county. Health officials wouldn’t say where the Pinellas resident lives.
Zika can cause a severe birth defect if women are infected during pregnancy.
Dr. Charles Lockwood, the dean of the Morsani College of Medicine at the University of South Florida and the senior vice president of USF Health, said that “out of an abundance of caution,” all pregnant women in the Tampa Bay area should use condoms with their partners until health officials determine if certain neighborhoods are affected by Zika.
“Until we can narrow down with great precision the neighborhoods infected, we have to assume every pregnant woman is at risk in Pinellas and Hillsborough until you can say it’s a specific neighborhood,” he said. “I believe that it’s also time for physicians in this area to start testing pregnant women in this area for the virus.”
Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn, whose city sits across the bay from Pinellas County, said Tuesday that he isn’t waiting for federal, state or county officials to act.
Buckhorn said he has authorized city officials to buy 4,000 mosquito “dunks,” or small, doughnut-shaped pellets. Code enforcement officers will comb the city, looking for abandoned or foreclosed homes with pools and drop the dunks into the water. The pellets kill mosquito larvae for up to 30 days.
“We’re aware of the impact Zika could have on restaurants and tourism in the city and the state,” the mayor said. “I’m not going to wait for either Congress to reconvene or any other agency to dictate the health and safety and welfare of my citizens.”
Also Tuesday, a new study detailed the devastation done to 45 Brazilian babies whose mothers were infected during pregnancy. The study, published in the journal Radiology, revealed that the dangers go beyond microcephaly, the condition of unusually small heads that has become the sinister signature of Zika.
Most of the babies in the study were born with microcephaly, but many also suffered other impairments, including damage to important parts of the brain: the corpus callosum, which connects the two hemispheres of the brain; the cerebellum, which plays a significant role in movement, balance and speech; and the basal ganglia, which are involved in thinking and emotion. The findings raised concerns about whether babies born without obvious impairments could develop brain damage as they grow.