Orlando Sentinel

As the Zika virus sweeps

Island boosts efforts to contain it amid fears of birth defect

- By Danica Coto Associated Press

through the Caribbean, Puerto Rico has become America’s front line in the battle against it — home to 3.5 million U.S. citizens and with a landscape that is ideal for the mosquito that spreads it.

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Leilani Dominicci has all the typical worries of pregnant women plus a new one spreading across Puerto Rico: the fear she will become infected with the Zika virus and put her baby at risk.

Her unease has escalated so much that the 38-yearold attorney barely leaves her home in the capital of San Juan because of warnings the island faces an onslaught of the mosquitobo­rne illness.

As the virus sweeps through the hemisphere, Puerto Rico has become America’s own front line in the battle against it. The island is home to 3.5 million U.S. citizens and has a tropical landscape that is an ideal breeding ground for the mosquito that spreads Zika, as well as the dengue and chikunguny­a viruses.

Officials have barred local blood donations, ramped up efforts to eradicate the Aedes aegypti mosquito and are trying to monitor every pregnant woman on the island due to fears Zika might cause a birth defect. The voluntary registry by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention extends to all Zika-infected women and their babies throughout the U.S.

Puerto Rico’s governor, meanwhile, has declared a public health emergency, and the CDC, which earlier urged pregnant women to reconsider visits to Puerto Rico, has asked Congress for $250 million in emergency aid to battle Zika on the island. The CDC has also sent nearly 40 health workers to help and is using the island as a test bed for Zika studies.

“For the U.S., it really is the territory that is going to have the most infections,”

said Steve Waterman, head of the CDC’s dengue branch in Puerto Rico. “It has the best medical and public health infrastruc­ture to try and answer some of these questions at the same time that we’re trying to control the disease.”

Among the CDC’s main goals is to test every pregnant woman in Puerto Rico for Zika and prevent people like Dominicci from contractin­g the virus. The CDC is urging people to take preventive measures, a call that Dominicci and her husband heeded after the first Zika case was reported in December.

“We have locked ourselves up at home,” said Dominicci, who is nearly 37 weeks pregnant. “It’s a constant concern, especially for women like us who are so far along because our options are limited. Ending a pregnancy at this stage is not even legal.”

Zika causes headaches, fever and a rash, though most people with the virus never show symptoms. CDC researcher­s in Brazil and Puerto Rico are trying to determine whether the virus can cause microcepha­ly, a condition in which babies are born with abnormally small heads, and Guillain-Barre, a rare paralyzing condition that can be fatal.

At least 117 people have tested positive for Zika in Puerto Rico, including five pregnant women. At least five people have been hospitaliz­ed, including a man recovering from GuillainBa­rre.

Waterman said more than 20 percent of the island population could contract Zika in an outbreak that could peak by summer.

More than 80 percent of adults in Puerto Rico already have had dengue and an estimated 30 percent

have had chikunguny­a, viruses spread by the same insect. But Zika poses a greater concern, said Dr. Brenda Rivera, the island’s epidemiolo­gist.

CDC officials have set up a temporary lab to breed mosquitoes and determine if they are resistant to the insecticid­es that Puerto Rico is using.

The center has also

trained lab workers in using a test created in Puerto Rico this year that can detect dengue, chikunguny­a and Zika all at once to cut costs and speed up the process. It’s launching a study to analyze how long Zika remains in semen, saliva and urine and tracking birth defects and Guillain-Barre cases.

The Puerto Rican gov- ernment halted all blood donations this month and began buying blood from the Red Cross to prevent potential contaminat­ion, following recommenda­tions from the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion.

The territory also issued an administra­tive order freezing the price of condoms, fearing sellers might take advantage of fears to raise prices given that there’s some evidence Zika can be spread through sex.

Worries about Zika have traveled throughout the Caribbean, where officials express concern the virus could hurt the tourism industry.

Martinique and French Guiana have declared an epidemic with more than 6,000 suspected cases, including at least 38 pregnant women and five people with Guillain-Barre. Haiti has reported more than 500 cases, but the actual number is believed to be much higher because of weak monitoring systems. Many Haitians live in shacks with little protection from insects that breed in trashclogg­ed canals and gullies.

Health officials stress that eliminatin­g breeding sites is key to preventing a Zika epidemic in the Caribbean.

In Puerto Rico, crews have rounded up used tires that can collect water, installed window screens at public schools and fumigated thousands of neighborho­ods, including Dominicci’s.

She said the number of mosquitoes has decreased greatly, but she still worries some will slip into her home. Her niece is developmen­tally disabled, and she said it’s been a struggle for her family.

“Bringing a child into the world in those conditions has to be devastatin­g,” she said of the potential tie between microcepha­ly and Zika. “I no longer have any options. I have to welcome my daughter no matter what at this point in my pregnancy.”

 ?? DANICA COTO/AP ?? Puerto Rico health workers monitor Zika-related issues recently. At least 117 have tested positive for the virus there.
DANICA COTO/AP Puerto Rico health workers monitor Zika-related issues recently. At least 117 have tested positive for the virus there.
 ?? U.S. CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION 2006 ?? Zika is spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which also carries the dengue and chikunguny­a viruses.
U.S. CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION 2006 Zika is spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which also carries the dengue and chikunguny­a viruses.

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