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World / Americas

With 14 local Zika cases, Florida asks for emergency aid

Published: 02 Aug 2016 - 12:00 am | Last Updated: 17 Nov 2021 - 11:21 am
Peninsula

Sharon Nagel, a Miami-Dade County mosquito control inspector, walks through the Wynwood neighborhood looking for mosquitos or breeding areas where she kills the mosquitos with larvicide granules or a fogger spraying pesticide as the county fights to control the Zika virus outbreak on July 30, 2016 in Miami, Florida. There have been a reported four individuals that have been infected with the Zika virus by local mosquitoes which makes them the first known cases of the virus being transmitted by mosquitoes in the continental United States. Joe Raedle/Getty Images/AFP

 

Miami, Aug 1: Florida now has 14 people who likely contracted the Zika virus from mosquitoes in the Miami area, and the state needs emergency help from the federal government, officials said Monday.

Governor Rick Scott announced 10 new cases of locally transmitted Zika, in addition to four made public by the department of health on Friday.

The cases mark the first time the Zika virus, which can cause birth defects and is considered particularly dangerous for pregnant women, is known to be spreading via local mosquitoes in the United States.

Over 1,600 cases of Zika have been previously reported in the US, but most were brought by travelers who were infected elsewhere. The virus can also spread by sexual contact.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are expected to issue "a notice to women who are pregnant or thinking of becoming pregnant to avoid unnecessary travel to the impacted area that is just north of downtown Miami," Scott added in a statement.

Officials still believe the transmission is confined to a square-mile area north of Miami, a popular arts and restaurant district known as Wynwood.

Scott asked for the CDC to dispatch an emergency team of specialists "to augment our response efforts to confirmed local transmissions of the Zika virus."

Two of the 14 cases involve women and the rest are men.

Funding for the Zika response has been a source of dispute among US lawmakers.

President Barack Obama asked for $1.9 billion in February, but Republicans protested, saying the money should be taken from funds previously set aside for Ebola. Congress went on summer recess last month without approving any legislation for Zika funds.

AFP