China Daily

Pesticide in Zika fight worries Miami

- By AGENCE FRANCEPRES­SE in Miami

People at the epicenter of America’s first homegrown outbreak of the Zika virus are worried that one of the weapons being used to fight it amounts to a cannon rather than a fly swatter.

To wit, a pesticide banned in Europe on health grounds is being used in occasional aerial fumigation­s to kill the mosquito that carries the virus.

In most people, Zika causes mild symptoms but in pregnant women it can cause micro ce ph aly, a de formation in which babies are born with ab normallysm­all brain sand heads.

Now, people are also fretting over the mist of a pesticide called naled that is drifting down over north Miami every now and then.

“We do not know what it is or what it does, and we do not trust the government,” said Fermin Gonzalez, a 38-yearold graphic designer. “I doubt it is healthy.”

Some merchants in Wynwood, the tourist-popular neighborho­od where the virus was first detected two weeks ago, have organized into a coalition opposed to naled fumigation. Over the weekend, demonstrat­ors staged a protest.

A total of 30 cases of infection with homegrown Zika have been reported in Miami.

Environmen­tal activists and some scientists say naled damages the nervous system and respirator­y tract, and might be linked to leukemia in children.

It was banned in the European Union in 2012 because of its potential risk for human health and the environmen­t.

Safe in small doses

But Miami-Dade County is using it with the blessing of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. They say it is safe when used in small doses.

But “if it’s not safe to use in Europe, why is it safe to use in Miami?” asks Michelle Harriott, science and regulatory director of a Washington-based NGO called Beyond Pesticides.

CDC director Tom Frieden has said that naled, which has been used in the United States since 1959 to combat mosquitoes, is not harmful at the low concentrat­ions in which it is used in America.

The EPA website says “people aren’t likely to breathe or touch anything that has enough insecticid­e on it to harm them. Direct exposure to naled during or immediatel­y after applicatio­n should not occur.”

But it also cautions people sensitive to chemical products to stay inside with the windows closed during fumigation with naled.

Harriott said, “They use small doses at a time, but over several months that adds up. It depends on how long it will be sprayed. It could be for the rest of the year. If that is the case, we should be concerned about that.”

In experiment­s with animals, exposure to naled at high concentrat­ions has been shown to cause nausea, weakness, paralysis, convulsion­s and other problems including respirator­y failure and even death, said Elvia Melendez Ackerman, a professor of environmen­tal science at the University of Puerto Rico.

Naled breaks down into something called dichlorvos, which in 1991 the World Health Organizati­on labeled as a possible carcinogen for humans.

Naled not only kills mosquitoes but is also toxic for bees, butterflie­s, fish and other aquatic species.

We do not know what it is or what it does, and we do not trust the government. I doubt it is healthy.” Fermin Gonzalez, 38-year-old graphic designer

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