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Rio: Pregnant women SHOULD attend Olympics

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    Posted: February 07 2016 at 8:54am
My headline is slightly misleading, but if Rio won't advise pregnant women from attending the games, to me, that's almost encouraging them to attend.   As we know, the WHO and CDC have also warned against travel, but have not warned against attending the summer games.   Hope everyone gets the picture here.


Health officials downplay risks for Zika virus during Rio Olympics


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RIO DE JANEIRO – Public health officials sought to downplay the risk the mosquito-borne Zika virus poses for spectators and athletes for the Summer Olympics to be hosted here in six months.

The World Health Organization on Monday declared the Zika virus an international public health emergency, following an outbreak of the disease that seemingly originated in Brazil and is now spreading northward across the Americas, including to the United States. The virus, transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, is suspected to be the culprit in a rising number of recent cases in Brazil of microcephaly, a condition in which infants are born with abnormally small heads.

The disease is also thought to be linked to a form of temporary paralysis. Some in Brazil have suggested that the disease, which had its last outbreak in French Polynesia in 2013 and 2014, may have come to Brazil with international tourists during the 2014 World Cup.

Though Brazil’s northeast has been the epicenter of the crisis, the virus has also been diagnosed in numerous patients in Rio de Janeiro, which is in Brazil’s southeast.

While expressing sympathy for women and children suffering with cases of microcephaly, Rio public health officials said during a press conference Tuesday with the Rio 2016 organizing committee they believed the risk to contract the disease would be low when the sporting event opens in six months, during the relatively cool month of August. They also said city workers are already destroying mosquito-breeding grounds.

João Grangeiro, the medical director of the Rio 2016 organizing committee, has said local authorities have not taken the decision to advise pregnant women to not come to the Games but will follow instructions from the World Health Organization should the international body issue that suggestion.

Some national teams have given their athletes instructions such as to sleep with the windows closed, said Grangeiro, but he said that the preventative measures to reduce breeding grounds for the mosquito would be the most important way to prevent contraction of the virus.

Asked about the location of the Olympic Park — a marshy region of waterways and lagoons of Rio straddling a neighborhood whose name, Jacarepaguá, is derived from the word referring to the zone’s native inhabitants, alligators — Daniel Soranz, Rio’s municipal health secretary, said the mosquito native to that area is the culex, not the Aedes aegypti.

Despite the international alarm over the virus, Mario Andrada, Rio 2016 spokesman, said the committee had “not received a single request to return tickets” to the events.


http://www.firstcoastnews.com/sports/health-officials-downplay-risks-for-zika-virus-during-rio-olympics/32555377



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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Albert Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 07 2016 at 9:00am

How do Olympic athletes feel about Brazil Zika outbreak?


EXPOSITION PARK, LOS ANGELES (KABC) --
Some experts say the summer Olympics should be canceled or delayed due to the Zika virus epidemic in Brazil. Local athlete Dee Dee Trotter says she won't let the disease distract her from the gold.

Trotter, 33, isn't just fast - she's Olympics fast. The U.S. sprinter has already won gold medals in two Olympic Games and is hoping to qualify for this year's games in Rio.

But it's not just the competition she may be facing this year.

"I don't care what kind of viruses and stuff come out. We're going to finish this one out," Trotter said.

MORE: Brazil's president calls Zika virus "real threat"

She's talking about the Zika virus. The World Health Organization is now calling the mosquito-borne illness a public health emergency.

One of the biggest outbreaks is in Brazil, where more than half-a-million people are expected to visit for this summer's Olympic Games.

Olympic officials downplayed the threat during a Wednesday media event.

"We have worked with the local authorities to increase the inspections in search for stagnant waters and also presence of the mosquito," said Mario Andrada, the director of communications for the organizing Olympic committee.

But while Zika infections generally lead to mild, flu-like symptoms, health officials are alarmed because the virus is also linked to a huge jump in microcephaly cases, in which babies are born with dramatically smaller heads and incomplete brain development.

Los Angeles County's lead health officer on Wednesday advised pregnant women to think again if they have plans to visit a country with a Zika outbreak.

"I strongly recommend that they defer and not travel to these locations because of the strong risks of potential serious birth defects," said Dr. Jeffrey Gunzenhauser with the L.A. County Health Department.

MORE: L.A. health officials establish plan of attack against Zika virus

Some health experts are calling on the International Olympic Committee to either cancel or postpone the Olympic Games. For athletes already in Rio, Zika can be a bit unnerving.

"I haven't really been outside the hotel, so it's kind of scary," said Alyssa Lampe, a wrestler for the U.S. team.

But for Trotter, the focus is on her training and a shot at a third gold medal in what will be her last year of competitive sprinting.

"I can't worry about the little things. I can't worry about my shoes being untied. I just gotta go," Trotter said.

http://abc7.com/health/how-do-olympic-athletes-feel-about-brazil-zika-outbreak/1186761/

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