Bogota (AFP) - The mosquito-borne Zika virus sweeping through
Latin America has claimed three lives in Colombia, as the United
Nations urged increased access to abortion because of fears of severe
birth defects. In the first direct statements from government
health officials blaming Zika for causing deaths, Colombia's National
Health Institute (INS) said Friday that the patients died after
contracting the virus and developing a rare neurological disorder called
Guillain-Barre syndrome.
Cases of the syndrome -- in which the
immune system attacks the nervous system, causing weakness and sometimes
paralysis -- have increased in tandem with the Zika outbreak, fueling
suspicions that it is a complication of the otherwise mild tropical
fever, which is also blamed for causing brain damage in babies born to
infected mothers.
"Other cases (of deaths linked to Zika) are going to emerge," said epidemiologist Martha Lucia Ospina, director of the INS. "The world is realizing that Zika can be deadly. The mortality rate is not very high, but it can be deadly."
Most Guillain-Barre patients recover, but the syndrome sometimes causes paralysis or even death.
Citing
the rise in babies born with microcephaly, or abnormally small heads
and brains, the UN human rights office urged countries hit by Zika to
give women access to contraception and abortion.
Women's
reproductive rights are a touchy subject in largely Catholic Latin
America, but the UN human rights office said countries urging women to
avoid pregnancy -- a list that comprises Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador,
Jamaica and Panama -- had to give them ways to control their fertility.
"How can they ask these women not to become pregnant, but not
offer... the possibility to stop their pregnancies?" spokeswoman Cecile
Pouilly told reporters. Many Latin American countries outlaw
abortion or allow it only if the mother's life is in danger. In El
Salvador, one of those warning against pregnancy, abortion is punishable
by up to 40 years in prison.
Honduras, which earlier this week
declared a state of emergency after tallying some 3,700 cases of Zika
since mid-December, said it is planning a full day dedicated to
eradicating the mosquitoes that carry the virus. President Juan Orlando Hernandez has allocated an initial tranche of $10 million in an attempt to halt the spread of the virus.
- Safe sex or none at all -
Health
officials in Brazil and the United States meanwhile warned that sex or
even kissing could potentially spread the typically mosquito-borne
disease. Brazil's top research center, the Fiocruz institute in Rio de Janeiro, said Zika had been detected in urine and saliva.
The scientists were careful to clarify that there is no proof
the virus can be transmitted through those fluids, but said people
should take precautions, especially expecting mothers. "Avoid
sharing glasses, silverware, contact with someone who has symptoms of a
possible infection. Don't kiss, obviously," said the institute's
director Paulo Gadelha.
The US Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
for their part urged people to use condoms or abstain from having sex if
they live in or have traveled to Zika-infected areas. Earlier
this week, US health officials confirmed the first case of sexually
transmitted Zika -- a person who had traveled to Venezuela and infected a
sexual partner in Texas upon return.
In the US territory of
Puerto Rico, officials declared a health emergency over Zika and
confirmed a pregnant woman had been infected, bringing the number of
cases on the island to 22. The emergency measures included freezing the price of condoms and combatting mosquitoes.
- Calls for more research -
The
World Health Organization, which has declared the rise in Zika-linked
birth defects an international emergency, warns that Zika could infect
up to four million people in the Americas and spread worldwide. The WHO has advised countries against accepting blood donations from people who have traveled to affected regions.
The
new warnings on intimate contact highlight how little is known about
Zika, a virus that was first identified in Africa in 1947 but had been
considered relatively mild until the current eruption of apparent
complications. Both the US CDC and Fiocruz in Brazil said more research was needed on person-to-person transmission.
Brazil
has been the country hardest hit by the outbreak, with an estimated 1.5
million cases. Colombia is next on the list, with more than 20,000
cases. Zika often goes unnoticed, and causes a relatively mild fever and rash in those who do develop symptoms. But
Brazil sounded the alarm after recording a surge in babies born with
microcephaly. It has registered 404 cases since October and 3,670
suspected cases, up from 147 in all of 2014.
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