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OPINION

Don't Panic Over Zika

Don't Panic Over Zika
(AP) 

Jane Orient By Monday, 18 April 2016 10:47 AM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Zika is, like Ebola, a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.

Now the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has stated that it is “clear” that the Zika virus causes a serious birth defect, microcephaly (small head).

CDC publishes a scary interactive map of cases diagnosed in the U.S. The highest number (78 yesterday, 82 today) is at the moment in Florida, colored an ominous brown.

CDC is in high gear, with politically correct advice on Zika. Meanwhile, cases of dengue in Mexico have topped 10,000.

Dengue is caused by a related but far more serious virus, carried by same Aedes aegypti mosquito.

And 78,000 people in Africa die every year of another relative, yellow fever. The vector was coming under good control decades ago, but is reemerging now. Asking “why” should be the main response to Zika.

Instead the advice seems to be: “Don’t travel, don’t have a baby, don’t let a mosquito bite you, stop climate change”— and give the authorities billions of dollars for a crash vaccine development program.

What should people do about Zika?

First, don’t panic. It’s not Ebola. Ebola and Zika are alike in that they were first recognized in Africa decades ago. Also, there is no cure or vaccine for either.

But while Ebola has killed thousands, Zika has likely not killed anyone. Symptoms, if any, are mild: a few days of fever, rash, joint pains, and red eyes.

Ebola is extremely contagious through personal contact. Zika is primarily transmitted by mosquito, although it may be carried in semen.

The main problem with Zika is that, like rubella (German measles), it can apparently cause birth defects. (Rubella can cause microcephaly.)

Zika virus has been found in the brain of a few babies born with microcephaly. But two things are very clear: Most microcephaly is not caused by Zika.

About 7 of 10,000 babies born in the U.S. have microcephaly — no thanks to Zika.

Most (more than 90 percent) of the Brazilian babies recently confirmed to have microcephaly tested negative for Zika.

Additionally, mostmothers who have Zika during pregnancy give birth to a normal, healthy baby. Mothers in northeastern Brazil also had a lot of other problems, including malnutrition, heavy exposure to toxic agricultural chemicals, and an aggressive vaccination campaign.

Panic can cause people to do things that might make the problem worse.

For example, New York State’s Zika prevention kits contain the mosquito repellent DEET, which is absorbed through the skin. It is not known to be safe in pregnancy. Some animal studies have shown nerve toxicity.

And what about vaccines?

A March 22/29 JAMA article is entitled: “Pregnancy in the Time of Zika: Addressing Barriers for Developing Vaccines and Other Measures for Pregnant Women.”

One barrier is “lack of a broadly accepted ethical framework” for clinical research during pregnancy. Basically, to test whether something harms a developing baby, you have to try it out on developing babies and see whether they are hurt.

A registered clinical trial that sought 50 pregnant volunteers to test Tdap (adult tetanus, diphtheria, acellular pertussis) vaccine — in Vietnam — was scheduled for completion in 2015. But Tdap had already been given to thousands of Brazilian expectant mothers some months before reports of microcephaly started to surface.

There was no control group of unvaccinated women. It was not, after all, research, but a public health response to an increase in pertussis (whooping cough) cases.

A Zika vaccine would likely be a live virus, and all live virus vaccines are contraindicated in pregnancy — and possibly while nursing. That includes measles, mumps, rubella, chickenpox, shingles, and rotavirus.

There is a case report of a nursing infant who got meningoencephalitis, probably from yellow fever vaccine virus. Nursing Labrador puppies got canine distemper, a relative of measles, after their mother got a booster shot.

WHO and CDC are quick to indict Zika virus, which might eventually turn out to be an innocent bystander. But the chief culprit is known: a breakdown in vector control.

In 1970, the safest and most effective public health weapon in history — DDT — was banned by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). In the 1990s, Mexico agreed to abandon its DDT program as a condition of NAFTA. Mosquitoes travel.

Alarm about Zika will be a public relations exercise, covering the waste of millions of human lives and billions of dollars on ineffective or harmful campaigns, if it does not open a discussion of why diseases on their way out in the 1970s are coming back now.

Jane M. Orient, M.D. is executive director of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons. She also is president of Doctors for Disaster Preparedness, and is the editor of AAPS News, the Doctors for Disaster Preparedness Newsletter, and Civil Defense Perspectives. She is the managing editor of the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons. She also is the author of "Your Doctor Is Not In: Healthy Skepticism about National Healthcare." For more on Dr. Orient, Go Here Now.



 

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JaneOrient
Alarm about Zika will be a public relations exercise, covering the waste of millions of human lives and billions of dollars on ineffective or harmful campaigns.
CDC, Dengue, EPA, Mosquito, Zika
835
2016-47-18
Monday, 18 April 2016 10:47 AM
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