FDA/CDC

Zika: CDC begins transition from emergency to long-term response


 

Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are deactivating their emergency operations related to the Zika virus, the agency announced Sept. 29.

The Zika Coordination and Operations Transition Team will instead shift the CDC’s efforts toward long-term activities, including continued support for physicians counseling pregnant women and advice on follow-up care for infants.

CDC News

Data from the agency show that while there was a steady stream of possible Zika cases reported among pregnant women in the summer of 2017 – about 100 cases every 2 weeks – the numbers were lower than in 2016, when the infection hit its peak. Overall, during 2015-2017, there have been a total of 2,197 cases of possible Zika infection among pregnant women reported in U.S. states and 4,504 in U.S. territories. During that same time period, there have been 98 liveborn infants with birth defects in the U.S. states and 138 in the U.S. territories.

CDC activated the Emergency Operations Center in January 2016 in response to reports on the impact of Zika virus infection in pregnancy, including cases of microcephaly.

“Deactivation does not mean that the threat of Zika has lessened in importance or that people are no longer at risk of infection,” CDC officials said in a statement. “Zika continues to be a public health threat in the United States and internationally. Zika is still a risk for pregnant women, and the continental United States and Hawaii will continue to see some travel-related cases as travelers visit countries and territories with risk of Zika transmission.”

On Twitter @maryellenny

Recommended Reading

CDC: First-trimester Zika infection had highest rate of birth defects
MDedge ObGyn
Don’t forget about Zika
MDedge ObGyn
Asymptomatic maternal Zika infection doesn’t dampen birth defect risk
MDedge ObGyn
Preventing Zika in pregnancy: What you need to know
MDedge ObGyn
Antiviral shows early promise for treatment of Zika infection
MDedge ObGyn
Early neuroimaging essential for Zika-exposed neonates
MDedge ObGyn
CDC refocuses Zika testing recommendations in pregnancy
MDedge ObGyn
Zika linked to a spectrum of neuroinflammatory diseases
MDedge ObGyn
Q&A: CDC director Brenda Fitzgerald stresses ‘science and service’
MDedge ObGyn
Zika’s 2017 summer less active than 2016
MDedge ObGyn

Related Articles