President Barack Obama on Tuesday called for the rapid development of tests, vaccines and treatments to fight the mosquito-transmitted Zika virus, which has been linked to birth defects and could spread to the United States in warmer months.
U.S.
health
officials are stepping up efforts to study the link between Zika
virus infections and birth defects, citing a recent study estimating
the virus could reach regions where 60 percent of the U.S. population
lives.
Obama was briefed on the potential spread of the virus by his top health and national security officials on Tuesday.
"The
president emphasized the need to accelerate research efforts to make
available better diagnostic tests, to develop vaccines and therapeutics,
and to ensure that all Americans have information about the Zika virus
and steps they can take to better protect themselves from infection," the White House said in a statement.
The virus has been linked to brain damage in thousands of babies in Brazil.
There is no vaccine or treatment for Zika, a close cousin of dengue and
chikungunya, which causes mild fever and rash. An estimated 80 percent
of people infected have no symptoms, making it difficult for pregnant
women to know whether they have been infected.
On Monday, the World Health Organization predicted the virus would spread to all countries across the Americas except for Canada and Chile.
In
a blog post, National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins
cited a Lancet study published Jan. 14 in which researchers predicted
the Zika virus could be spread in areas along the East and West Coasts
of the United States and much of the Midwest during warmer months, where
about 200 million people live.
The study also
showed that 22.7 million more people live in humid parts of the country
where mosquitoes carrying the virus could live year round.
Given the threat, Collins said "it
is now critically important to confirm, through careful epidemiological
and animal studies, whether or not a causal link exists between Zika
virus infections in pregnant women and microcephaly in their newborn
babies." Microcephaly results in babies being born with abnormally small heads.
There
is still much to learn about Zika infections, experts said. For
example, it is not clear how common Zika infections are in pregnant
women, or when during a pregnancy a woman is most at risk of
transmitting the virus to her fetus.
Collins said
the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease is conducting
studies to more fully understand the effects of Zika in humans, and to
develop better diagnostic tests to quickly determine if someone has been
infected. The NIAID is also working on testing new drugs that might be
effective against the virus.
The U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention also announced new instructions for
pediatricians treating infants whose mothers may have been exposed to
the virus during pregnancy.
In those guidelines,
the CDC made clear that it considers the Zika virus a nationally
notifiable condition, and instructs doctors to contact their state or
territorial health departments to facilitate testing of potentially
infected infants.
Dr. Kathryn Edwards of
Vanderbilt University, who serves on the American Academy of Pediatrics'
committee on infectious disease, said the guidelines were intended to
help establish whether Zika causes microcephaly and to help pregnant
women who may have been infected with the virus.
Microcephaly is a lifelong condition with no known cure, the CDC website said. Symptoms range from mild to severe.
In
mild cases, infants often have no symptoms other than small head size,
but doctors still need to check their development regularly. In severe
cases, babies may need speech, occupational and physical therapy.
The
guidelines for testing infants affected by Zika infections follows CDC
guidelines for caring for pregnant women exposed to Zika virus, which
were first reported by Reuters. The CDC said last week it is trying to
determine how many pregnant women may have traveled to affected regions
in the past several months.
On Tuesday, the CDC
added the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Dominican Republic to its list of
countries and territories with Zika transmissions, bringing the total to
24.
The CDC has told pregnant women not to travel
to countries and territories in Latin America and the Caribbean
affected by Zika. Travel companies, including United Airlines, have
begun offering refunds or allowing pregnant women to postpone trips to
regions affected by Zika with no penalty.
There
are no global estimates for how many people in the world have been
infected by the Zika virus, World Health Organization spokesman
Christian Lindmeier said on Tuesday.
He said that because Zika has such mild symptoms, the virus has "not really been on the radar."
Lindmeier
said it was not yet clear whether the virus affecting Brazil and other
countries in Latin America and the Caribbean was a mutated version of
the virus that has caused prior outbreaks.
He said
the WHO was working with the CDC, the Institut Pasteur in France and
the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine to establish that.
"There is a lot of effort going into this now, on the ground, in the laboratories, everywhere," Lindmeier said.
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