‘Zika is scarier than we initially thought’: CDC shows growing concern for outbreak as scientists study virus’ link to brain inflammation and paralysis

Tuesday, April 12, 2016
By Paul Martin

Obama sought emergency funds of $1.9b to help fight Zika virus
Request was stalled in Congress, $589m in funds left over from the Ebola crisis will be redirected to fighting Zika, but officials say it’s not enough
Scientists are studying whether the disease is linked to other diseases that cause brain inflammation, nerve damage, paralysis
Brazilian scientists found Zika preferentially targets developing brain cells
Health officials hope a vaccine will be ready for testing in early fall
Map showing range of mosquitoes that could carry Zika virus spans the entire southern US from Connecticut to California
According to CDC, 346 travel-related cases have been reported in 41 states

JESSICA CHIA
DAILYMAIL.COM
12 April 2016

The more researchers learn about the Zika virus, the scarier it appears, federal health officials said Monday as they urged more money for mosquito control and to develop vaccines and treatments.

Scientists increasingly believe the Zika virus sweeping through Latin America and the Caribbean causes devastating defects in fetal brains if women become infected during pregnancy.

‘Everything we look at with this virus seems to be a bit scarier than we initially thought,’ Dr. Anne Schuchat of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said at a White House briefing.

And while experts don’t expect widespread outbreaks in the continental U.S., ‘we absolutely need to be ready,’ she said.

President Barack Obama has sought about $1.9 billion in emergency money to help fight the Zika epidemic internationally and to prepare in case the virus spreads here, but the request has stalled in the GOP-controlled Congress.

Last week, the administration said it would use $589 million in funds left over from the Ebola outbreak for some of that work.

But that ‘is not enough for us to get the job done,’ said Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health, whose agency hopes to have a possible vaccine ready for first-stage safety testing in early fall.

He said: ‘It’s just a temporary stopgap.’

Zika was long considered a nuisance virus, causing only mild symptoms, if any, in most people.

Brazilian researchers reported Sunday that Zika preferentially targets developing brain cells.

Starting with reports from Brazil, over the last year infections in pregnant women have been strongly linked to babies born with unusually small heads, a birth defect called microcephaly that can signal underlying brain damage.

‘I’m not an alarmist,’ Fauci said, but he and Schuchat cited growing reason for concern about Zika.

The Rest…HERE

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