The Palm Beach Post

CDC closes Zika emergency response center

Feds will now handle response to virus as routine.

- By Daniel Chang

The CDC’s Emergency Operations Center for Zika response was activated in January 2016 in response to the public health threat as the virus spread rapidly through South America and the Caribbean.

But now, the federal agency said, it will handle the response to Zika as a “routine, long-term activity,” noting that the virus still poses a danger because it can cause birth defects and neurologic­al problems in children born to women infected during pregnancy.

CDC officials also emphasized that the closure of the Zika emergency response center did not lessen the threat of Zika, nor does it mean that local spread of the virus will not recur in Florida or elsewhere.

Zika is primarily spread through the bite of an infected Aedes aegypti mosquito, but the virus can be difficult to detect because only one in five people infected show symptoms, which include a rash, fever, muscle and joint pain, and red eyes.

There is no vaccine or treatment for the virus, which also can spread through sexual contact.

The first outbreak of Zika in the continenta­l United States occurred in Miami’s Wynwood neighborho­od in summer 2016, and spread north to Miami’s Little River neighborho­od and across Biscayne Bay into Miami Beach. The South Florida outbreak lasted through the first week of December, when state officials declared that mosquitoes were no longer spreading Zika in South Beach.

This year, Florida health officials have reported no local outbreaks of Zika. The Florida Department of Health has reported a total of 187 Zika cases, including 103 pregnant women, as of Friday. All but one of the Florida cases were found in people who had traveled to one of the 75 countries where the World Health Organizati­on says mosquitoes are spreading the virus.

The last confirmed case of Zika spread by mosquitoes in Florida was reported in December. Only one state, Texas, has reported a mosquito-borne infection this year.

 ?? EFE / ZUMA PRESS ?? Zika is primarily spread through the bite of an infected Aedes aegypti mosquito.
EFE / ZUMA PRESS Zika is primarily spread through the bite of an infected Aedes aegypti mosquito.

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