installed more than 20,000
ovitraps during the 2015 dengue outbreak. The same ovitraps will be used to monitor a potential Zika outbreak in tropical regions of Peru. On January 15, 2016, because of the "growing evidence of a link between Zika and microcephaly" the
Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC) issued a
travel warning advising pregnant women to consider postponing travel to Brazil as well as the following countries and territories where Zika fever had been reported: Colombia, El Salvador,
French Guiana,
Guatemala,
Haiti,
Honduras,
Martinique,
Mexico,
Panama,
Paraguay,
Suriname,
Venezuela, and the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. On January 20, the
Ministry of Health of Chile published a health notice. On January 22, eight more countries and territories were added to the list of those affected:
Barbados, Bolivia, Ecuador,
Guadeloupe,
Saint Martin,
Guyana,
Cape Verde, and
Samoa. On February 1,
Costa Rica and
Nicaragua were added to the list, bringing the number of countries and territories affected to 28. The agency issued additional guidelines and suggested that women thinking about becoming pregnant consult with their
physicians before traveling. Canada issued a similar travel advisory. Questions have been raised about the readability and effectiveness of the press releases issued by the WHO/PAHO, CDC, and the ministries of health of affected countries with the average readability of a press release by the WHO measured at 17.1 on the Flesch Kincaid grade level readability test. On February 5, after the laboratory confirmation of a Zika virus infection in the U.S. in a non-traveler, which was linked to sexual contact with an infected partner, the CDC issued interim guidelines for prevention of sexual transmission of Zika virus for the United States. A bill,
Zika Authorization Plan Act of 2016 (H.R. 4562), was introduced in the second session of the United States
114th Congress by Representative
Curt Clawson (R-FL) on February 12, 2016, aimed at reducing the spread of the virus.
Paraguay reported its first case of Zika in a pregnant woman on March 11. On March 18, CDC cautioned men who have been infected with Zika from attempting to conceive children due to probability of virus transfer from man to woman during sexual activity which in turn can affect the fetus, under this caution, men are advised not to try conception until six months after the infection. Colombia reported its first cases of microcephaly associated to the Zika virus on April 14, 2016. The CDC authorized emergency use of a Zika Virus RNA Qualitative test on April 28 to detect Zika virus in the blood of patients who have symptoms of Zika virus infection and live in or have traveled to an area with ongoing Zika virus transmission. This is the first commercial test to detect Zika virus authorized by the
United States Food and Drug Administration for emergency use. On May 6,
Major League Baseball announced that a series of games between the
Miami Marlins and
Pittsburgh Pirates scheduled to be played at the end of the month in
San Juan, Puerto Rico would be relocated to
Marlins Park in
Miami, Florida after a number of players on each team voiced concerns regarding the threat of Zika exposure. By mid-August at least 37 people had contracted the virus in neighborhoods near the city of Miami, Florida, though officials estimated that the actual number of infections was much higher due to under-reporting of mild illness. It was determined in June that travelers to Dominican Republic lead New York City in positive Zika tests. The first-affected area in the continental United States, the
Wynwood neighborhood of Miami, was declared Zika-free in September, 2016. After the virus stopped circulating in
South Beach, all of Florida was declared Zika-free in December, 2016. One case of local transmission was reported in Texas up until September, 2017. As of 2018, Zika remains endemic in Puerto Rico, but the number of cases was reduced from about 8,000 reported per month at the peak in August 2016 to about 10 reported per month in April 2017.
Asia Following the spread of Zika infection into Southeast Asia in June 2016,
Singapore,
Thailand and
Vietnam become the most heavily affected. Singapore has planned to release an army of mosquitoes that contain the
Wolbachia bacteria to fight the Aedes aegypti mosquito population. The
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) members have increased information sharing and joint research on the virus. On September 30, Thailand confirmed that two babies have been born with microcephaly. Prior to the case, Thailand has allowed abortion for pregnant women that have been affected by birth defects. Malaysia is still undecided on the issue, with doctors there letting the mother make the decision whether or not to abort. Rentokil, a Malaysian pest company, has designed an Integrated Mosquito Management (IMM) program to curb the spread of Aedes mosquito. On October 17, Zika was declared as endemic in Vietnam by the country
Health Ministry due to the number of local cases. Vietnam confirmed that one baby has been born with microcephaly on October 31. Following the rise of local Zika infection cases in the
Philippines, the virus have also been declared as endemic by the country
Health Department. The government of the republic hosting the "One Philippines against Zika" national summit on October 28 with church in the country has joint fight to curb the spread of the virus by issuing a pastoral guidance to help raise awareness about the mosquito-borne disease among local communities.
Taiwan has also seen an increase of infection, most of the cases are believed to be imported from other countries. On October 27,
Myanmar reported its first imported case on a pregnant foreign woman. Canada, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Ireland, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, the United Kingdom, United States as well the European Union To prevent the transmission of the Zika virus, WHO recommends using
insect repellent, wearing long-sleeved clothes to cover the body, and using screens and
mosquito nets to exclude flying insects from dwellings or sleeping areas. It is also vital to eliminate any standing water near homes to minimize breeding areas for mosquitoes. Authorities can treat larger water containers with recommended
larvicides. Furthermore, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that containers holding water near homes either be sealed or scrubbed once per week, because mosquito eggs can stick to them. The designation has been applied in the past to the
Ebola outbreak in 2014, the outbreak of
polio in Syria in 2013, and the
2009 flu pandemic. South Korea held an emergency meeting in response to the WHO declaration on February 2, 2016. On March 9, 2016, WHO announced that research should prioritise prevention and diagnosis, not treatment, and in particular non-live vaccines suitable for pregnant women and those of childbearing age, novel mosquito control measures, and diagnostic tests that can detect dengue and chikungunya as well as Zika.
Responses has sent more than 200,000 troops to go "house to house" in the campaign against Zika-carrying mosquitoes. In January 2016, it was announced that, in response to the Zika virus outbreak, Brazil's National Biosafety Committee approved the releases of more genetically modified
Aedes aegypti mosquitoes throughout their country. Male genetically modified mosquitoes mate with females in the wild and transmit a self-limiting gene that causes the resulting offspring to die before reaching adulthood and thus diminishes the local mosquito population. On February 1, 2016, the WHO declared the current Zika virus outbreak an international public health emergency, and the Brazilian President released a decree that increased local and federal pest control agents' access to private property required by mobilization actions for the prevention and elimination of
Aedes mosquito outbreaks in the country. Some experts have proposed combatting the spread of the Zika virus by breeding and releasing mosquitoes that have either been genetically modified to prevent them from transmitting pathogens or that have been infected with the
Wolbachia bacterium, thought to inhibit the spread of viruses. Another proposed technique consists of using radiation to
sterilize male larvae so that when they mate, they produce no progeny. Male mosquitoes do not bite or spread disease. In February, the Brazilian federal government mobilized 60% of the country's
Armed Forces, or about 220,000 soldiers, to warn and educate the populations of 350
municipalities on how to reduce mosquito breeding grounds. A joint statement on the sharing of data and results on the Zika outbreak in the Americas and future public health emergencies was issued on February 10, 2016, by a group of more than 30 global health bodies. The statement reinforces a similar consensus statement issued by WHO in September 2015. The statement calls for free access to all data as rapidly and widely as possible. In February 2016,
Google announced that they were donating $1 million via
UNICEF to fight the spread of the Zika virus and offering professional personnel to help to determine where it will hit next. == Prevention and treatment ==