CHICAGO (Reuters) -
U.S. disease detectives have moved into full outbreak mode over the
Zika virus, assembling a team of hundreds of experts to try to better
understand its impact as it spreads in the Americas.
On Sunday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
dedicated an emergency operations center staffed around the clock to
address Zika, a mosquito-borne virus linked to severe birth defects in
thousands of babies in Brazil, agency officials told Reuters.
The CDC has set up such command centers to handle the Ebola
outbreak in 2014 and the Haiti cholera epidemic that began in 2010. This
time, the team includes many more experts on pregnancy given the
unusual impact of Zika.
"We always involve OB-GYNS
and pediatricians. In this response, this team is actually much larger
and is in many ways the focal point of the activities," Tracee
Treadwell, who is helping to lead the CDC's Zika response, said in an
interview.
The World Health Organization on Thursday
said it would consider next week whether to declare Zika an
international health emergency, and estimated that as many as 4 million
people could be affected by the virus as it spreads in Latin America and
the Caribbean to North America in the coming months.
The U.S. public health agency has been working with the Brazilian
Ministry of Health and the WHO since early November to understand the
sudden increase in cases of microcephaly, a birth defect marked by small
head size that appears linked to Zika. Brazil said this week about
3,700 cases of microcephaly are being studied for signs of Zika.
"It's an extraordinarily complicated situation. There
appears to be an association, but we just don't have enough data yet,"
Treadwell said.
The agency grew more confident of a
link between microcephaly and Zika in the middle of January, after it
conducted its own tests on tissue samples from two stillborn babies and
two babies who died shortly after birth.
All four
of the microcephaly cases from Brazil were positive for Zika. A genetic
analysis showed the virus from the tissue samples matched the strain
circulating in Brazil. The test results prompted the
CDC's travel warning on Jan. 15, which advised pregnant women to avoid
affected countries.
The agency is working with
Brazil's government to set up a rigorous study of Zika's association
with microcephaly and is already collaborating on research into a link
with Guillain-Barre, a rare disorder in which a person's immune system
attacks nerve cells.
All Zika communications go
through CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden and Dr. Lyle Peterson, who is
heading the U.S. response. The CDC has received "a lot of requests for assistance in
many other countries" beyond Brazil, said Treadwell, one of two deputies
reporting to Peterson. "We're in the throes of working on what sorts of
assistance can we provide."
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Tiffany Wu)
Culled from Yahoo
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