Manila Bulletin

WHO seeks $56 million for Zika; Brazil microcepha­ly cases rise

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GENEVA (Reuters) – The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) called on Wednesday for $56 million to combat the Zika virus, a disease that has been linked to severe birth defects in Brazil and has spread to nearly 30 countries and territorie­s.

The funds sought would be used until June to fast-track vaccines, carry out diagnostic­s and research into how the mosquito-borne virus spreads, as well as virus control, the WHO said.

A public health expert, Lawrence Gostin, said the United Nations health agency had “grossly underestim­ated” the need as the virus, which has spread rapidly across the Americas, will likely spread to many other regions.

The WHO declared the outbreak a global public health emergency on Feb. 1, noting the associatio­n of the virus with two neurologic­al disorders: microcepha­ly in babies and Guillain-Barre syndrome that can cause paralysis.

“Possible links with neurologic­al complicati­ons and birth malformati­ons have rapidly changed the risk profile for Zika from a mild threat to one of very serious proportion­s,” WHO Director- General Margaret Chan said in a WHO strategy paper on Wednesday.

The funds sought include $25 million for the agency and its regional office and the rest for aid partners such as UNICEF. The WHO expects the money to come from states and other donors. In the meantime it has tapped a new emergency contingenc­y fund for $ 2 million for initial operations.

Gostin, a professor at Georgetown University in Washington, said the WHO should have a much larger emergency contingenc­y fund. He compared the funding plan to the WHO’s initial slow response to the outbreak of Ebola, a virus that killed more than 11,300 people in two years, mostly in West Africa. Brazil microcepha­ly cases rise Brazil, worst hit by the Zika outbreak, said on Wednesday that most of the 508 confirmed cases of microcepha­ly reported in the country are likely related to the virus, and called its previous count too conservati­ve. Brazil is investigat­ing more than 3,900 additional suspected cases of microcepha­ly, but it has not yet been proven that the virus can cause the rare defect.

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