By deciding to declare that the mosquito-borne virus is a "public health
emergency of international concern," it allows more money, resources
and scientific research to be dedicated to addressing the growing
disease.
This is the fourth time that the international organization used such a
classification. Previous incidents included the Ebola outbreak in 2014, a
resurgence of polio earlier that same year, and the H1N1 pandemic in
2009.
The connection between the Zika virus and other neurological disorders
is “strongly suspected, though not yet scientifically proven,” said
Margaret Chan, the director-general of the WHO, referring to both the
microcephaly birth defects and the rare cases of paralysis known as
Guillain-Barre syndrome.
She noted that the WHO “found no public health justification for
restrictions on travel or trade to restrict the spread of the Zika
virus.”
There are now 25 countries affected by the Zika virus, Chan said, which marks an increase from earlier reports.
The current outbreak of the virus, which has been linked to babies being born with a birth defect known as microcephaly
-- abnormally small heads -- has been traced back to Brazil, and it has
since spread to a growing number of countries in Central and South
America, as well as dozens of cases reported in the U.S. among people
who had traveled to the region recently.
President Obama spoke to Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff on Friday about the ways that the countries can work together to address the growing issue.
"The leaders agreed on the importance of collaborative efforts to deepen
our knowledge, advance research, and accelerate work to develop better
vaccines and other technologies to control the virus," the White House
press office said in a statement Friday. "The leaders agreed to continue
to prioritize building national, regional, and global capacity to
combat infectious disease threats more broadly."
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