Asia, Africa vulnerable to spread of Zika virus: WHO

I Brazil issues Olympics warning as Zika emergency declared

Reuters/AFP
GENEVA
The Zika virus linked to a microcephaly outbreak in Latin America could spread to Africa and Asia, with the world’s highest birth rates, the World Health Organization warned as it launched a global response unit against the new emergency. The WHO on Monday declared an international public health emergency due to Zika’s link to thousands of recent birth defects in Brazil. “We’ve now set up a global response unit which brings together all people across WHO, in headquarters, in the regions, to deal with a formal response using all the lessons we’ve learned from the Ebola crisis,” said Anthony Costello, WHO director for maternal, child and adolescent health.
“The reason it’s a global concern is that we are worried that this could also spread back to other areas of the world where the population may not be immune,” he told a news conference in Geneva on Tuesday. “And we know that the mosquitos that carry Zika virus - if that association is confirmed - are present through Africa, parts of southern Europe and many parts of Asia, particularly South Asia”
Costello added the WHO was drafting “good guidelines” for pregnant women and mustering experts to work on a definition of microcephaly including a standardised measurement of baby heads. “We believe the association is guilty until proven innocent,” he said, referring to the connection drawn in Brazil between the Zika virus and microcephaly, a condition where babies are born with abnormally small heads.

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