The Philippine Star

WHO seeks assessment of Zika risks

At Rio Olympics

-

WASHINGTON (AFP) — The head of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has asked a panel of experts to consider whether the Rio Olympics should be held as scheduled due to concerns that the event could spread the Zika virus.

The WHO has sent teams of senior scientists to Brazil four times “to gather first-hand data on the current situation and assess the level of risk to the large number of athletes and spectators expected to attend the Olympic Summer Games,” director-general Margaret Chan wrote in a letter dated June 1.

She was responding to a request by United States Sen. Jeanne Shaheen to evaluate the public health hazards of holding the Games in August. Shaheen posted Chan’s letter online on Friday.

”Given the current level of internatio­nal concern, I have decided to ask members of the Zika emergency committee to examine the risks of holding the Olympic Summer Games as currently scheduled,” Chan said. She added that the experts were due to meet soon and vowed to post their advice online immediatel­y.

Shaheen said in a statement after receiving Chan’s letter: “The Olympic Games draw athletes and spectators from every corner of the globe and it’s important that we understand the global health implicatio­ns.”

Experts said Zika is to blame for a surge in cases in Latin America of microcepha­ly — a serious birth defect in which babies are born with unusually small heads and brains.

The WHO said yesterday that the emergency committee meeting had already been planned for this month, as it was required to meet within about three months of its last gathering on March 8.

The exact date of the meeting should be published by the end of this week, spokesman Nyka Alexander said in an e-mail.

She pointed out that the experts’ job was to “provide public health advice and technical guidance to the government of Brazil and the Rio 2016 Local Organizing Committee on the public health risks of hosting a mass gathering such as the Olympics, and the recommende­d health systems that should be in place to host a safe and healthy event.”

 ?? AP ?? Health workers get ready to spray insecticid­e to combat Aedes aegypti mosquitoes that transmit the Zika virus under the bleachers of the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro Tuesday.
AP Health workers get ready to spray insecticid­e to combat Aedes aegypti mosquitoes that transmit the Zika virus under the bleachers of the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines