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Sunday, November 24, 2024

No travel alerts over Zika

THE Department of Foreign Affairs said on Tuesday it has no plans to issue travel advisories after the World Health Organization declared “public health emergency of international concern” over the Zika virus, blamed for causing a surge in brain-damaged babies.

The UN health body said that a rise in cases of microcephaly —in which babies are born with an abnormally small head—was likely caused by the mosquito-borne virus, and declared the situation a “public health emergency of international concern.”

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But DFA spokesperson Charles Jose said since the Department of Health has said that the Philippines was still free of the virus, the government still has no plans of issuing a travel advisory to the 26 countries that the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said had “active Zika transmission.

Standard precaution. Quarantine nurses at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport terminals check the temperature of incoming passengers by using portable non-touch thermal temperature scanners as a standard protection against the entry of diseases in the country. ERIC APOLONIO 

“We have no plans at this time, but we continue to monitor the situation,” Jose said as he advised Filipino travelers against going to countries affected with Zika virus if they have no important things to attend.

The countries with active Zika transmission are Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Puerto Rico, Costa Rica, Curacao, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Guatemala, Guyana Haiti, Honduras, Martinique, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Saint Martin, Suriname, US Virgin Islands, Venezuela, American Samoa, Samoa and Cape Verde

But officials in Thailand said a 22-year-old Thai man is likely to have caught the same strain of the virus that has caused panic in countries such as Brazil and Colombia.

The virus “was confirmed by blood tests,” Air Vice Marshall Santi Srisermpoke, director of Bangkok’s Bhumibol Adulyadej Hospital, told reporters.

“His symptoms were a fever, a rash and redness of the eyes,” he said, adding he had not traveled abroad.

The man has recovered and been discharged from hospital, he added, without giving further details of how long he was in hospital, or where he contracted the sickness.

Amnuay Gajeena, director-general of the Disease Control Department of the Public Health Ministry, said it was “likely to be the same strain as the one found in South America”.

“It’s not a new disease in Thailand… we had the first confirmed case in 2012. Since then we have an average of not more than five cases yearly,” he said.

“There is no need to panic… we have never had an epidemic of the Zika virus in Thailand all of the cases were one-offs.”

The Aedes aegypti mosquito, which also spreads dengue fever, carries the sickness.

It breeds in tropical areas, including the Philippines, which has seen a surge in cases of dengue in recent months.

The World Health Organization linked a spike in birth defects in South America to the virus.

The UN health body said that a rise in cases of microcephaly — in which babies are born with an abnormally small head — was likely caused by the mosquito-borne virus, and declared the situation a “public health emergency of international concern”.

First detected in Africa in 1947, Zika was considered a relatively mild disease until the current outbreak was declared in Latin America last year.

Brazil was the first country to sound the alarm on the apparent link with birth defects.

It has since become the worst affected country, with some 4,000 suspected cases of microcephaly, of which 270 have been confirmed.

As alarm grows over the surge in the number of cases, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Jamaica and Puerto Rico have warned women to delay conceiving until the Zika outbreak is brought under control.

 

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