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9th Zika case confirmed in Louisiana

[FILE] A generic photograph of mosquitos.

BATON ROUGE –  The Louisiana Department of Health has received confirmation of one additional case of Zika virus. The patient had travelled to a region with ongoing Zika transmission and sought medical care in Louisiana after returning, where tests confirmed the viral infection.

This is the ninth case of travel-associated Zika confirmed in Louisiana. There have been no confirmed cases of local transmission within Louisiana.

Read: Possible non-travel related Zika case reported in Florida

After travelling to an area with ongoing Zika transmission, the patient returned to Louisiana and began to show symptoms of an illness, prompting the individual to seek treatment. The patient and their health care provider have been notified of the Zika-positive result.

The Department of Health has reported the case to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and it will soon be included in the CDC’s Zika case count for Louisiana. National and state case counts can be found here.

Zika Surveillance

Dr. Frank Welch, Medical Director for the Center for Community Preparedness, says the State of Louisiana through the Office of Public Health conducts Zika surveillance activities in an effort to detect Zika virus infections as soon as possible.

“Surveillance is twofold. It includes working with hospitals and other health care providers so that we are notified if and when a possible Zika case is diagnosed,” Welch explained. “It also includes our work with mosquito control personnel throughout the state who alert us if they detect mosquitoes that are carrying the virus.”

Welch says the goal is to have robust early warning systems in place that will allow the State to know if a local Zika infection has occurred so the public can be warned.

Avoiding Infection by Zika Virus

Zika virus is the greatest threat to pregnant women, as their child may be at risk for certain severe birth defects as a result of infection. Pregnant women and women trying to get pregnant should avoid travel to areas with Zika transmission. The CDC has a list of travel notices for these areas here. Because Zika can spread from an infected man to his sex partner, pregnant women should have their male partners use a condom correctly every time or abstain from sex.

All travelers to areas where Zika virus is active should be aware and take the following steps to protect themselves from mosquito bites:

The same precautions apply at home, and people should also make sure their house is mosquito-proof by ensuring their windows and doors have intact screens. Once a week or after every rainfall, empty standing water from any containers around your home, especially in small

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