The
World Health Organization has declared the spread of Zika virus an international
public health emergency and has freed funds to combat the disease.
“This
is an extraordinary event,” said WHO Director General Margaret Chan at a press
conference on Monday. “It poses a public
health threat to other parts of the world and a coordinated international
response is needed.”
Margaret
Chan cited the pattern of the disease’s spread, the lack of a vaccine, and the
large global population of mosquitoes that can carry the virus as factors that
contributed to the declaration.
The
declaration, only the fourth in WHO’s history, comes just days after the
organization said the number of cases could hit 4 million by the end of the
year. The virus has spread rapidly throughout the Americas infecting people in
more than 20 countries.
Officials
in Brazil, the hardest hit country, have estimated 1.5 million infections.
The
Zika virus is spread to people through mosquito bites and causes genetic
mutation in babies. The most common symptoms of Zika virus disease are fever,
rash, joint pain, and conjunctivitis (red eyes). The illness is usually mild
with symptoms lasting from several days to a week.
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