Zika Virus: 10 Things Nurses Need To Know: Reported
Zika Virus: 10 Things Nurses Need To Know: Reported
Zika Virus: 10 Things Nurses Need To Know: Reported
Aedes aegypti
For now, it is highly proven that the virus is transmitted easily through mosquito bites, and
not directly from person to person. Once the mosquito bites and draws blood from an
infected person, it becomes a carrier of the virus, passing the virus on to the next person
that it feeds on. The possibility of sexual transmission is still under investigation, as there are
random cases which showed evidence that such transmission is made plausible via blood
transfer. Considerably, blood transfusion is one way to contract the virus. The mother-tofetus transmission has also been documented as a possible mode of transfer.
Sporadic outbreaks were then discovered in the Pacific Islands like Fiji and Vanuatu. The
analysis of these outbreaks got a distinctive pattern: the rise of infants with neurological
birth defects and microcephaly corresponds to the outbreak of Zika virus in those areas,
leading to a conclusion that the virus had been responsible for the said infant condition.
Countries and territories with active Zika virus transmission. Image via: CDC.gov
Amniotic fluid in some pregnant women who came from Brazil with microcephalic infants had
revealed a positive Zika virus, indicating a strong corresponding influence with the said birth
defect.
It was noted that Brazil normally gets microcephalic babies at about several hundred cases
each year (a range of 100 to 200 cases), but by October 2015, statistics have shown a
drastic rise of affected Brazilian babies, with 3,500 cases recorded in that year alone. Thats
17 times more compared with the numbers in 2014! For the record, this has been the biggest
outbreak recorded in Brazil, as millions of individuals become infected with the virus in just a
short span of time.
Microcephaly
compared to
(left)
In January of this year, CDC scientists found Zika virus strains in the brains of two babies
with microcephaly who have expired within 24 hours after birth. Two pregnancies that ended
in miscarriages have also yielded the virus after testing. Pregnant women in Illinois and
Florida, who tested positive for Zika virus, were also linked to have travelled to South
America in the past. But with all these observations noted by CDC, they are still inconclusive
if some of the birth defects with microcephaly and infant loss via miscarriage were made
possible by the virus alone.
Enough evidence had pointed out that the first trimester is a vulnerable period, putting the
baby at risk of acquiring birth defects once the mother was infected. Scientists are still
working on gathering enough data to make a correlation of Zika and with the risks involved
in the different stages of pregnancy.
Protection against mosquito bites and eliminating mosquito breeding grounds are amongst
the highly recommended guidelines to prevent the spread and acquisition of the disease.
Blood tests are of necessity to identify subjects for quarantine until such time that the
person with the virus is no longer a risk to society.
similar to the Dengue fever in the United States, starting from Puerto Rico, going to Florida,
then to the Gulf Coast states, and ultimately reaching Hawaii. That being said, the projected
time for the virus to reach Florida and Texas would probably occur in the spring or summer.
As temperature becomes favourable for the mosquitoes, so does the viability of the Zika
virus being carried by it. The vessel used for its spread can be prevented to enter your doors
with extra caution and regular information updates.
Better housing construction, regular use of air conditioning, use of window screens and door
screens, and state and local mosquito control efforts helped to eliminate [widespread
transmission of mosquito borne infections like malaria and dengue] from the mainland, Lyle
Petersen, the director of the CDCs division of vectorborne diseases, said.
The state of the disease as of this time is frightening in the sense that the cases are on the
rise with no signs of standing still. It is spreading explosively, throughout the continent of
America as per the World Health Organization (WHO). Nevertheless, surveillance and control
of the virus is possible with the support and cooperation of everyone.