First Zika Virus Infection Detected in Switzerland Since 2019 – Federal Office of Public Health Reports Imported Case

by time news

2023-05-16 04:30:00


An Aedes aegypti mosquito – potential carrier of the Zika virus. (Archive image) KEYSTONE/AP/FELIPE DANA sda-ats

This content was published on May 16, 2023 – 04:30


(Keystone-SDA)

For the first time since 2019, an infection with the Zika virus has been detected in Switzerland. The Federal Office of Public Health (BAG) reports it in its latest weekly bulletin. It is a so-called “imported case”.

This means that the person concerned became infected abroad and then entered Switzerland. As the BAG announced on Monday at the request of the Keystone-SDA news agency, there have never been any infections with this virus in Switzerland itself.

The office expects that more Zika cases will be reported to it as travel increases again. However, Zika transmissions have been at a low level worldwide since 2018. Since the reporting obligation began in 2016, the BAG has registered a total of 75 Zika cases.

Usually not a big deal, but…

Zika is transmitted through the bites of Aedes mosquitoes. The virus was first found in rhesus monkeys in Uganda’s Zika Forest about 70 years ago. In most cases, an infection is unremarkable. Fever, headache, and reddening of the skin can be symptoms.

Serious consequences can occur, among other things, if women become infected with Zika early in pregnancy. The infants can then develop what is known as microcephaly, a brain and skull malformation. From 2015, thousands of such malformations appeared in Brazil when the Zika epidemic hit there.

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared a “public health emergency of international concern” in February 2016. Brazil sent tens of thousands of soldiers to fight mosquitoes. Other countries in the region were also affected.

2019 infections in France

French authorities reported in October 2019 that two people in the Var department in southern France had been infected with the Zika virus for the first time on European soil. The two people affected were not infected while traveling. The carrier of the virus was probably the Asian tiger mosquito. Both people recovered.

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