WHO claims Zika is no longer a ‘public health emergency’

Red Orbit – by Brian Galloway

Despite the fact that it continues to spread throughout Latin America, the Caribbean and regions of  southeast Asia, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced on Friday that it no longer views the spread of the Zika virus as a public health emergency of international concern.

Rather, the public health division of the United Stations is reclassifying the ailment, particularly its effect on pregnant women and unborn children, as a chronic problem which will not be going away anytime in the near future, according to NPR and NBC News reports.  

Despite appearances, WHO officials denied that changing the status indicates that they view Zika as less of a threat than before. Rather, they insist that they needed to move the virus to a different level because of funding-related reasons and other bureaucratic issues, the media outlets said.

“It is really important that we communicate this very clearly: We are not downgrading the importance of Zika,” Dr. Peter Salama, the executive director of the WHO’s Health Emergencies Program, told NPR. “In fact, by placing this as a longer term program of work, we’re sending the message that Zika is here to stay. And WHO’s response is here to stay, in a robust manner.”

“There was no downgrading at all of this,” Dr. David Heymann, chairman of the organization’s emergency committee on Zika virus, added during a telephone briefing with NBC News. “[We] agreed that Zika must be managed within the [WHO] as are other important infectious diseases. The committee felt that what is best now is a very robust technical response to the virus.”

Still much work to be done to combat the disease, say experts

The WHO originally declared Zika a public health emergency in February, during a time when Brazilian health officials were investigating roughly 4,000 cases of microcephaly, a birth defect associated with the virus that causes babies to be born with smaller-than-normal heads and brain damage. At the time, NPR said, officials were predicting several thousand additional cases.

Things have not been as bad as initially feared. In the months that followed, Brazil reported more than 2,000 additional Zika infections, but far fewer cases were reported elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere. Colombia (57) had the second highest number of reported infections globally, while  the US (31) in third, according to WHO statistics released on Thursday and cited by NPR.

However, Columbia is also reportedly investigating some 300 cases of microcephaly to whether or not there is a link to Zika, and some countries, including Haiti and Venezuela, have “not been vigilant” about reporting cases, the news organization added. Furthermore, some countries likely will not even experience their first cases until next year, as the disease requires nine months after the onset of an outbreak for the majority of microcephaly cases to appear.

That has led some experts, such as Georgetown University’s Lawrence Gostin, to question the WHO’s decision. During an interview with Reuters, Gostin called the reclassification of the Zika virus “unwise” and warning that it might discourage some countries from investing the resources needed to prepare for the disease. “Although Zika’s spread has waned, it still holds the potential for an explosive epidemic,” he added. “If it were to reemerge in the Americas or jump to another part of the world, it would significantly threaten a new generation of children.”

Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) agreed that issuing public health emergency declarations helps direct global attention to a disease like Zika, and that the WHO’s mandate had accomplished that goal. However, he added that there was still a lot of work to be done to combat the disease, including the development of a vaccine. The new status “doesn’t change that fact,” Dr. Adalja told Reuters.
Read more at http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/1113416557/zika-no-longer-health-emergency-111916/#GWB5oSHzjKibwEIg.99

3 thoughts on “WHO claims Zika is no longer a ‘public health emergency’

  1. Yea, that ZIKA propaganda shit hasn’t fooled anyone. It’s been dying for a long time now. Time for a new virus!

    How about just reversing the letters and calling the next virus AKIZ? That should scare some people, right?

    Yea, that’ll last a few months until we can figure out another virus to promote fear in the masses. Gotta keep that fearmongering going, don’t ya know.

    Worse yet, I have a neighbor who’s friend (who is around 21-25 years of age) tells me that he’s a scientist who examines diseases and says ZIKA is real.

    Unfrigginbelievable….

  2. Yes sheeple
    It was just another distraction
    Like many you fell for and panicked about

    Don’t worry , they are currently making another fake story to wip you all up into a frenzy soon

    Maybe this next one will be just as fake and sensational as Sandy Hook , Zika , Dylan Roof
    Etc
    How many times do you have to be played a fool , Before you realize you are that fool?

    MSM = distractions are us
    CNN = fool us once, we keep trying to fool you twice

    Etc

  3. “Things have not been as bad as initially feared.”

    Correction: Things have not been as bad as initially PORTRAYED, BY THE LYING jEWB#TCH SO-CALLED ‘MEDIA’.

    One more fake-@ss ‘disease’ thrown on the back burner until they have need to dredge it up again for the purpose of more fearmongering, designed to lead us to acquiesce to their MANDATORY ‘VACCINATIONS’.

    clink

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