Zika has struck hardest in Brazil, where the outbreak was first
detected last year, and has since spread rapidly through the Americas.
Vice Health Minister Fernando Ruiz
told journalists that the number of infections in Colombia has been
falling by 600 cases a week. While Zika is still circulating in the
country, Colombia considers the drop-off sufficient to say it has moved
into an endemic phase from the epidemic phase.
"We
can declare that the epidemic is ended. Colombia is the first country
on the American continent to declare an end to the epidemic," Ruiz said.
Zika
has struck hardest in Brazil, where the outbreak was first detected
last year, and has since spread rapidly through the Americas.
The
disease can cause the devastating birth defect microcephaly, a
condition defined by abnormally small head size which can lead to severe
developmental problems in infants, as well as other neurological
problems. Brazil has reported more than 1,600 cases of microcephaly
linked to Zika, a spike not replicated elsewhere to date.
Colombia's
Zika outbreak has been closely monitored by infectious disease experts
to understand whether the virus will affect other countries in a similar
manner to Brazil. Colombia has reported nearly 100,000 cases of
infection, with 21 cases of Zika-related microcephaly.
Some
disease experts say they are reluctant to say the worst of the outbreak
has passed in Colombia, particularly with mosquito season due to resume
in the country within a few months, and the many unknowns surrounding
the first mosquito-borne virus that can also be transmitted through
sexual contact.
"It's difficult to make predictive statements on an epidemic when the vast majority of cases go unreported," said Dr. Peter Hotez,
dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of
Medicine in Texas. About 80 percent of Zika infections are believed to
be asymptomatic.
"There is a possibility that it
has not taken hold in Colombia as it has in Brazil and Puerto Rico, but
we're not going to know the full impact of this epidemic for several
more months until we see whether additional waves of microcephaly cases
are born," Hotez said.
British scientists
predicted earlier this month that it will take two to three years for
the current Zika outbreak to come to an end in Latin America, assuming
that enough people have been infected and become immune to the virus.
Colombia's
Health Ministry has also lifted its recommendation that women delay
pregnancy because of the virus, Ruiz said, though there may be new
outbreaks of the disease in future.
Colombia
expects that there will be an uptick of cases of microcephaly in
September and October, Ruiz said, when pregnant women infected during
the peak of the epidemic will give birth.
The
World Health Organization has said there is strong scientific consensus
that Zika can also cause Guillain-Barre, a rare neurological syndrome
that causes temporary paralysis in adults. Colombia has reported 350
cases of the condition connected to Zika.
There is
no vaccine or treatment for Zika, which is a close cousin of dengue and
chikungunya and causes mild fever, rash and red eyes in cases with
symptoms.
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