China Daily

Brazil declares end to Zika emergency

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SAO PAULO — Brazil declared an end to its public health emergency over the Zika virus on Thursday, 18 months after a surge in cases drew headlines around the world.

The mosquito-borne virus wasn’t considered a major health threat until the 2015 outbreak revealed that Zika can lead to severe birth defects. One of those defects, microcepha­ly, causes babies to be born with skulls much smaller than expected.

Photos of babies with the defect spread panic around the Western Hemisphere and around the globe, as the virus was reported in dozens of countries. Many would-be travelers canceled their trips to Zika-infected places. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and others recommende­d that women who were pregnant shouldn’t travel to affected areas. The concern spread even more widely when health officials said it could also be transmitte­d through sexual contact with an infected person.

The health scare came just as Brazil, the epicenter of the outbreak, was preparing to host the 2016 Olympics, fueling concerns the Games could help spread the virus. One athlete, a Spanish wind surfer, said she got Zika while training in Brazil ahead of the Games.

In response to the outbreak, Brazil launched a mosquito eradicatio­n campaign. The Health Ministry said those efforts have helped to dramatical­ly reduce cases of Zika. From January through midApril, the ministry recorded 95 percent fewer cases than during the same period last year. The incidence of microcepha­ly has fallen as well.

The World Health Organizati­on lifted its own internatio­nal emergency in November, even while saying the virus remained a threat.

“The end of the emergency doesn’t mean the end of surveillan­ce or assistance” to affected families, said Adeilson Cavalcante, the secretary for health surveillan­ce at Brazil’s Health Ministry. “The Health Ministry and other organizati­ons involved in this area will maintain a policy of fighting Zika, dengue and chikunguny­a.”

All three diseases are carried by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.

But the WHO has warned that Zika is “here to stay”, even when cases of it fall off, and that fighting the disease will be an ongoing battle.

Adriana Melo, the Brazilian doctor who raised alarm bells in the early days of the outbreak about a link between Zika and birth defects, said the lifting of the emergency was expected following the decline in cases.

“The important thing now is that we don’t forget the victims,” Melo said.

 ?? LEO CORREA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A health worker sprays insecticid­e to combat the Aedes aegypti mosquitoes that transmit the Zika virus, in Rio de Janeiro last year.
LEO CORREA / ASSOCIATED PRESS A health worker sprays insecticid­e to combat the Aedes aegypti mosquitoes that transmit the Zika virus, in Rio de Janeiro last year.

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