Zika virus spreads to Angola

The Zika virus is transmitted to people primarily through the bite of an infected Aedes aegypti species mosquito. A U.S. study of Zika-infected pregnancies found that 6 percent of them ended in birth defects. The rate was nearly twice as high for women infected early in pregnancy. Picture: James Gathany/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention via AP,

The Zika virus is transmitted to people primarily through the bite of an infected Aedes aegypti species mosquito. A U.S. study of Zika-infected pregnancies found that 6 percent of them ended in birth defects. The rate was nearly twice as high for women infected early in pregnancy. Picture: James Gathany/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention via AP,

Published Jan 16, 2017

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It's doubly bad news for a country that is still recovering from both a cholera and a yellow fever epidemic that has killed hundreds. 

The two cases may not yet be cause for concern, but they're an ominous reminder of how ripe the region could be for a widespread Zika outbreak.

"Up until two months ago, we didn't have any detected case, but, now, we have two cases of Zika," Health Minister José Luis Gomes Sambo said on Wednesday. "We have to take preventable measures, especially in the anti-vectorial fight against the mosquitoes," he added.

One case was reportedly a French citizen on travel, while the other is a 14 year-old in the Angolan capital Luanda, World Health Organization (WHO) regional emergency director Socé Fall told Foreign Policy. 

Even though it's just two cases, health officials aren't taking any chances. Fall said the WHO is working closely with Angola's government to monitor the patient and investigate any new suspected Zika cases. After West Africa's Ebola outbreak in 2014, international health experts are on edge. "We didn't wait to react," Fall said.

And for good reason. Luanda, with a dense population and poor infrastructure, is a ripe breeding ground for disease outbreaks.

From there, the virus could spread like wildfire if un-contained. 

This Zika strain seems to be much more virulent than ones we've seen in the past.

A study in September 2016 found that over 2 billion people in Asia and Africa could be at risk of contracting the Zika virus in Asia and Africa, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa and southeast Asia.

Angola has already learned that lesson the hard way. 

On Tuesday, the ministry of health said 106 people have died in a cholera outbreak since December. And a yellow fever epidemic killed 400 three months ago. (The yellow fever outbreak jarred the international community so badly that the WHO led a campaign to vaccinate over 12 million people in Angola and neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo last year).

And disease isn't the only struggle Angola's beleaguered health sector faces. It also has steep funding problems. In March last year, Angola gutted public spending after laggard global oil prices stifled its economic growth (Angola, one of Africa's largest petro-states, relies on oil for 95 percent of its government revenue). The spending cuts targeted vital government services like water sanitation, sewage, and health, which likely exacerbated the disease outbreaks.

In September 2016, the WHO declared an end to the global Zika emergency, though emphasized the virus remained a threat.

 

Before the new Angola cases, 69 countries and territories around the world reported cases of the Zika virus since the outbreak started in 2015, the WHO says, with most reported cases in Central and South America. Before Angola's announcement, only two other African countries, Cape Verde and Guinea-Bissau, registered Zika infections during the latest outbreak. Each had only one case.

Zika isn't new to the African continent. 

The virus was first discovered in Uganda in 1947.

The virus, spread primarily through mosquitoes, can cause flu-like symptoms in people who contract the disease. It can cause birth defects for pregnant women infected. 

Ana Beatriz, a baby girl with microcephaly, celebrates her fourth month in Lagoa do Carro, Pernambuco, Brazil, in February. Picture: EPA

The WHO recorded some 2,300 cases of such birth defects, known as microcephaly, in the latest outbreak.

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