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Thread started 01/24/16 4:18am

Adorecream

Zika Epidemic

Has anyone heard of this disease called "Zika" on the news lately. Apparently its an infection spread by mosquitoes that causes pregnant women to have babies with tiny heads (Microcephalism) and has potential to be the worst epidemic to affect the 3rd world. So far it hasonly affected Brazilians and Latinos in other Latin countries except the temperate ones like Argentina, Uruguay and Chile.

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It has now spread to most of Polynesia including Samoa and French Polynesia and Indonesia. It is also showing up amongst Black people in the southern states and Mexico. Yet there are no white victims of Zika so far, all are various types of mixed race, Amerindians, Polynesians and Blacks. Microcephaly is where the brain is tiny or missing like Prince's son and means the baby if it survives that they will be severely retarded all their life and have diminished IQs of under 50. Zika has the potential to affect everyone else in the tropics and to devastate Africa, cures and vaccines for Zika have not been discovered yet. Authorities in Brazil and Mexico have asked at risk women not to get pregnant for 2 years as millions of Zika babies will be a drain on health and educational systems of these places. However women in these sex mad countries are not paying heed.

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Anyway this Zika sounds like the new Ebola and AIDS epidemic. [Totally unnecessary drivel was here. ~ RenHoek, Moderator]

Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name
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Reply #1 posted 01/28/16 9:34am

PurpleJedi

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Apparently they're going to try using genetically modified mosquitoes to "fight" the Zika virus.

The INTERESTING thing is that there's also a claim that genetically modified mosquitoes STARTED this whole outbreak to BEGIN WITH!!!

Zika was first confirmed in Brazil in may of 2015, but had been seen in other nations before. Question: Why didn't it cause an epidemic of birth defects in any other countries? How exactly would you miss a tenfold increase in children born with most of their brain missing? Zika in Brazil does not seem to behave like the Zika we were familiar with before.

How could the Zika catastrophe be linked to genetically modified mosquitoes?

The OX513A strain of male mosquitoes released in Juazeiro creates larvae that normally die in the absence of antibiotics, which is supposed to help decimate wild mosquito populations when these males are released in the wild. Problem here being of course, that "life, uh, finds a way". An estimated 3-4% of the ...antibiotic. These larvae should then be free to go on and reproduce and pass on their genes. In fact, they may be the only ones that are passing on their genes in places that have their wild mosquito population decimated by these experiments.


omfg

Check out the original post HERE

By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory!
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Reply #2 posted 01/28/16 10:20am

XxAxX

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wtf? for real??? eek eek eek eek eek eek eek eek now if true, that would be a heck of thing

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from: https://www.reddit.com/r/...leased_in/

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Genetically modified mosquitoes released in Brazil in 2015 linked to the current Zika epidemic?

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This seems like a case to me where mankind's arrogance may have backfired on us.

Here is Oxitec back in 2015 proudly announcing that their GM mosquito has decimated the local mosquito population in a field trial:

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http://www.oxitec.com/pre...ue-hotspo/

Releases of the genetically engineered Oxitec mosquito, commonly known as ‘Friendly Aedes aegypti’, reduced the dengue mosquito population in an area of Juazeiro, Brazil by 95%, well below the modelled threshold for epidemic disease transmission.

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Here is a map showing where Juazeiro is located.

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Here is a map showing where all the deformed babies are being born.

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Zika was first confirmed in Brazil in may of 2015, but had been seen in other nations before. Question: Why didn't it cause an epidemic of birth defects in any other countries? How exactly would you miss a tenfold increase in children born with most of their brain missing? Zika in Brazil does not seem to behave like the Zika we were familiar with before.

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How could the Zika catastrophe be linked to genetically modified mosquitoes?

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The OX513A strain of male mosquitoes released in Juazeiro creates larvae that normally die in the absence of antibiotics, which is supposed to help decimate wild mosquito populations when these males are released in the wild. Problem here being of course, that "life, uh, finds a way". An estimated 3-4% of the ...antibiotic. These larvae should then be free to go on and reproduce and pass on their genes. In fact, they may be the only ones that are passing on their genes in places that have their wild mosquito population decimated by these experiments.

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What is the effect on these mosquitoes that grow up with a mutilated genome? It is thought that this should introduce a fitness cost, that is, they should have greater difficulty surviving. What do we know about these mosquitoes? Has adequate research ever been done on how a genetically mutilated mosquito copes with viral infections? Could the mosquito be more susceptible to certain pathogens, that it then passes on to humans? If a pathogen like the Zika virus can thrive in the mosquito without restraint, it could evolve into something far more dangerous than its original incarnation, pulling the lever on the slot machine with every replication until it hits the genetic jackpot.

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Is it too much to ask for a moratorium on these type of genetic experiments?

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PurpleJedi said:

Apparently they're going to try using genetically modified mosquitoes to "fight" the Zika virus.

The INTERESTING thing is that there's also a claim that genetically modified mosquitoes STARTED this whole outbreak to BEGIN WITH!!!

Zika was first confirmed in Brazil in may of 2015, but had been seen in other nations before. Question: Why didn't it cause an epidemic of birth defects in any other countries? How exactly would you miss a tenfold increase in children born with most of their brain missing? Zika in Brazil does not seem to behave like the Zika we were familiar with before.

How could the Zika catastrophe be linked to genetically modified mosquitoes?

The OX513A strain of male mosquitoes released in Juazeiro creates larvae that normally die in the absence of antibiotics, which is supposed to help decimate wild mosquito populations when these males are released in the wild. Problem here being of course, that "life, uh, finds a way". An estimated 3-4% of the ...antibiotic. These larvae should then be free to go on and reproduce and pass on their genes. In fact, they may be the only ones that are passing on their genes in places that have their wild mosquito population decimated by these experiments.


omfg

Check out the original post HERE

[Edited 1/28/16 10:22am]

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Reply #3 posted 01/28/16 10:23am

2freaky4church
1

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GMO alert!!!

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #4 posted 01/28/16 10:25am

XxAxX

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oh holy mother of fuck eek eek eek eek eek eek

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http://www.econexus.info/publication/release-gm-mosquito-aedes-aegypti-ox513a

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Reply #5 posted 01/28/16 11:19am

morningsong

Zika virus infection can be spread by yellow fever mosquitoes (Aedes aegypti), and experimental evidence suggests the virus also can be transmitted by Asian tiger mosquitoes (Aedes albopictus).Aedes mosquitoes—already known for transmitting other viral illnesses, such as dengue and chikungunya—have a wide and expanding global distribution, including in the United States [3]. To predict places around the world where Zika virus might spread as people infected in the Brazilian outbreak come into contact with biting Aedes mosquitoes, the NIH-supported research team, led by Kamran Khan of St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, first mapped the global distribution of Aedesmosquitoes along with the climate conditions the researchers deemed favorable to the spread of Zika virus. They then layered onto this map the final destinations of travellers who might have been exposed to Zika virus before departing Brazil from September 2014 to August 2015.

According to the researchers’ calculations, about 200 million Americans—more than 60 percent of the population—reside in areas of the United States that might be conducive to the spread of Zika virus during warmer months through biting mosquitoes, including areas along the East and West Coasts and much of the Midwest. In addition, another 22.7 million people live in humid, subtropical parts of the country that might support the spread of Zika virus all year round, including southern Texas and Florida. Already, there are reports of local spread of the virus within Puerto Rico and of travelers returning to the U.S. with the Zika infection.

http://www.dovemed.com/cu...th-threat/

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Reply #6 posted 02/03/16 12:30pm

PurpleJedi

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sigh

By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory!
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Reply #7 posted 02/04/16 8:16am

RodeoSchro

As usual, claims of Zika being an Illuminati/government/Rockefeller/Goat People conspiracy are wrong. It never ceases to amaze (and disappoint) me that people are so gullible and want to believe the worst about everything. But here are some things that will make you all feel better. These things are known as "facts":

http://gizmodo.com/these-...1756893104

GMO Mosquitos / Oxitec

Perhaps the most ubiquitous rumor circulating online is that the Zika outbreak was caused by genetically modified mosquitos released by insect control company Oxitec. While it’s true that Oxitec is in the business of making GM mosquitos, and it’s also true that Oxitec has conducted GM mosquito trials in Brazil, that’s where this theory’s links to reality end.

Oxitec’s GM mosquitos carry a heritable genetic trait which renders any offspring unable to survive without the antibiotic tetracycline. When a wild female breeds with a GM male, the larvae die long before reaching adulthood. For the Oxitec plot to work, a bunch of GM mosquitoes would have had to be released with an ample supply of tetracycline.

And then, also, the insect control company had a bunch of Zika virus on hand? And somehow the epicenter of the Zika outbreak occurred hundreds of miles from where Oxitec was conducting GM mosquito trials? Moreover, in what world are mosquitos programmed to self destruct also likely carriers for a pandemic?

These are questions that don’t have simple answers.

Rockefeller Monkey Experiments / Illuminati

Did you know that the AMERICAN GOVERNMENT has had the Zika virus in biological archives since 1947? Did you know that Zika was originallyisolated from monkeys created in a secret Rocke...experiment and is now “available for order” online?

The idea that the current Zika epidemic stems from samples taken from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) is a special brand of paranoia. Yes, the ATCC has known pathogenic samples in its biological culture collection, and yes, Zika virus is one of them, and YES, scientists can request access to these specimens for research purposes. But it isn’t exactly like ordering a pizza. If you put in a request for any specimens that are even mildly pathogenic, you need to show a lot of credentials, and you need to back those up with legal documents signed by representatives of your research institution.

Population Control / Vaccines / Bill Gates

Of course population control—why else would the virus’ main victim be pregnant women? And what better way to cull the sheeple than with vaccines?

There are a few different versions of this theory out there, and it’s all a bit nebulous. But here are some “facts” I’ve managed to glean through my “research”:

  • In late 2014, the Brazilian government added Tdap (Tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis) to its list of routine vaccinations for pregnant women
  • Zika virus broke out in Brazil in 2015
  • The Bill and Melinda Gates foundation recently launched a program to study the immune responses of pregnant women to tdap. Purportedly, this was to “test to the safety of the vaccine regimen.” However:
  • Bill Gates is a Known Eugenicist

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Reply #8 posted 02/04/16 11:44am

purplethunder3
121

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eek

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #9 posted 02/04/16 4:07pm

XxAxX

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purplethunder3121 said:

eek

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Reply #10 posted 02/04/16 4:10pm

XxAxX

avatar

.

[Edited 2/4/16 17:28pm]

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Reply #11 posted 02/04/16 4:11pm

XxAxX

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[Edited 2/4/16 17:24pm]

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Reply #12 posted 02/04/16 4:26pm

purplethunder3
121

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"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #13 posted 02/04/16 5:02pm

XxAxX

avatar

.

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[Edited 2/4/16 17:25pm]

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Reply #14 posted 02/04/16 5:06pm

XxAxX

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Reply #15 posted 02/04/16 5:08pm

morningsong

^smh Gross.




Summary

Scientists first isolated Zika virus in 1947, but the disease it caused in humans was considered mild: It did nothing to 80% of the people it infected, and the ones who had symptoms only had temporary fevers and rashes. But last year, a high number of cases of brain-damaging microcephaly in newborns began to surface in Brazil in lockstep with the arrival of the Zika virus, which is spread by mosquitoes. The World Health Organization on 1 February declared these clusters of disease a "public health emergency of international concern," and a rush of vaccinemakers has jumped into the race to develop a preventive. Vaccines exist against several other flaviviruses, the family Zika belongs to, and experts predict that this won't be a major scientific challenge. They also say it may be possible to piggyback on the other flavivirus vaccines, like ones made for dengue and yellow fever. Then again, vaccine R&D takes time, and because this effort is starting from scratch, researchers say it will take at least a few years before a vaccine can prove itself safe and effective in large human efficacy studies.


http://science.sciencemag.../543.short

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Reply #16 posted 02/04/16 5:31pm

XxAxX

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Reply #17 posted 02/04/16 5:38pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

tumblr featured 1995 mosquito

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #18 posted 02/04/16 5:49pm

luvsexy4all

lets hope it hits parts of orlando and a cedrtain old age home

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Reply #19 posted 02/04/16 6:17pm

RodeoSchro

XxAxX said:




Psssh. Everyone knows that can't happen, because the Earth is flat, not round.

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Reply #20 posted 02/04/16 6:24pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #21 posted 02/04/16 6:27pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #22 posted 02/04/16 6:32pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #23 posted 02/05/16 12:42am

XxAxX

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Reply #24 posted 02/05/16 12:43am

XxAxX

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[Edited 2/5/16 0:44am]

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Reply #25 posted 02/05/16 12:45am

XxAxX

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Reply #26 posted 02/05/16 1:23am

XxAxX

avatar

.

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[Edited 2/5/16 1:24am]

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Reply #27 posted 02/05/16 6:28am

XxAxX

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from: http://www.foxnews.com/he...cmp=hplnws

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Outbreaks

Mosquito expert: Washington downplaying Zika virus threat to US

  • City health workers fumigate the Guadalupe community as part of preventive measures against the Zika virus and other mosquito-borne diseases in Santa Tecla, El Salvador February 3, 2016.

    City health workers fumigate the Guadalupe community as part of preventive measures against the Zika virus and other mosquito-borne diseases in Santa Tecla, El Salvador February 3, 2016. (REUTERS/Jose Cabezas)

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As the number of birth defects linked to a mosquito-borne virus surpasses 4,000 in Brazil, and scientists scramble to create a vaccine to protect against the untreatable disease, public health officials are bracing themselves for a potential outbreak in the U.S.

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The threat has some advocacy groups pushing for tighter health screenings among travelers and immigrants from Zika-afflicted countries, while public health officials and tropical disease experts argue preparing to fight the Aedes aegypti, an insect that doesn’t respond to common pesticide, is more pressing.

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“First of all, I think Zika will come to America, and actually I think it may be more important than the messaging we’re getting out of Washington and [The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention],” Dr. Peter J. Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine, told FoxNews.com.

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Fighting Zika may be tougher in the US than in Latin America

The Aedes aegypti— the primary vector for Zika— ravaged parts of Central and South America by infecting thousands with dengue fever and yellow fever between the ‘40s and ’60s. But in recent years, it has struck the region again after governments discontinued a reduction effort that involved spraying the controversial insecticide DDT to eradicate the pest. In most places, DDT has been banned after scientists discovered its chemicals can cause environmental wreckage, as well as vomiting, tremors and seizures among humans, as well as other life-threatening side effects.

Joe Conlon, a technical adviser at the American Mosquito Control Association, said the U.S. government would never deploy DDT for precisely those reasons.

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“[DDT]’s got too much emotional baggage and environmental baggage associated with it,” Conlon told FoxNews.com. “Anyone who would try to use it would be excoriated. We have other means to get rid of these mosquitoes.”

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Hotez thinks Washington’s take on the current Zika virus outbreak in Latin America may be a matter of nuance, but that he takes issue with the implication of the term “small outbreak,” which the federal government has said the U.S. could see some of among Gulf Coast states.

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“Zika has the ability to cause birth defects,” Hotez said. “By saying ‘small outbreaks’ are going to affect Florida and Texas, are we saying we can tolerate small outbreaks of microcephaly in these states? I would say, ‘No, we don’t have any tolerance.’”

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Microcephaly, a condition that causes babies to be born with partially formed brains and abnormally small heads, has been linked to Zika and has impacted nearly 4,100 children in Brazil. In the U.S., which has reported two Zika cases that may have been sexually transmitted, at least one child, in Hawaii, has been born with microcephaly after his or her mother traveled to a Zika-afflicted country. The CDC has advised pregnant women against traveling to more than two dozen regions in the Americas, Oceania and Africa, but it has said more evidence is needed to confirm a link between the virus and microcephaly.

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Hotez said conditions in many of the lower-income areas in the South mimic those of Brazil and other places that have seen a Zika outbreak. Aedes aegypti mosquitoes like to breed in pools of water that accumulate in discarded car tires, flower pots, and filled drinking cups left outdoors.

“I believe all of the conditions where they’re present in Latin America and the Caribbean are also present in Texas and other Gulf Coast states,” said Hotez, who predicted the number of Aedes aegypti, which already reside in this part of the U.S., could start multiplying in March, when the weather warms up. “Which means we have time [to prepare]— and now’s the time to do it,” he said.

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But controlling the main mosquito that carries Zika may prove more challenging in the U.S. than in Latin America, where governments are going into homes and spraying walls with pesticide, Hotez and Conlon said. Unlike other common mosquitoes in the U.S., they like to feed on humans during the day, which means people who live in homes without window screens would have a high infection risk, Hotez said.

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“This is a day-biting mosquito, and that gets to be problematic because if you’re spraying when children are out playing … we’re going to have to make a better assessment of that,” Hotez said.

Conlon said standard mosquito control practices in the U.S. won’t work on the Aedes aegypti.

“Down in Central and South America, they’re using these thermal foggers— that can work and knock down the mosquito, but in the U.S, they’re not going to allow federal and state folks to allow them into their homes to do that,” Conlon said. “It’s not something that mosquito abatement will do, but public pressure may make them do that. People might demand something like that of their own volition.”

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In preparation for the potential arrival of U.S.-borne Zika cases, Hotez called on Gulf Coast municipalities to provide people with protective window screens if they don’t have them.

Conlon echoed Hotez and said he expects mosquito control to lie primarily in the hands of municipalities. He called on local governments to begin spreading public awareness campaigns about the dangers of Zika and how to protect their homes and families against the Aedes aegypti.

In Texas— which has seen a case of sexual transmission and reported the first U.S. Zika case in mid-January— the department of health has prioritized such tracking and awareness campaigns, said Chris Van Deusen, spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services.

“That’s very much the discussion we’re having right now—making sure we know what the latest science is, and watching infections to see where they’re occurring, and if they’re traveling from Central and South America or the Caribbean if they have gotten sick with Zika,” Van Deusen told FoxNews.com.

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“Public information—that’s our first line of defense,” said Van Deusen, who added the state is working with municipalities and the CDC to educate travelers about prevention methods.

Conlon also called on the federal government to provide funding to municipalities so they could test mosquitoes in labs, “so we can identify people who are bringing that disease into the country … and marshal our resources to rapidly wipe it out, once it occurs.”

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The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) already has guidelines in place for screening immigrants for communicable diseases before they enter the U.S. But screening for Zika may prove challenging because only one in five cases presents with symptoms, unlike Ebola, which could be suspected with the sign of a fever. Yet for some individuals and advocacy groups, the Zika outbreak feels all too familiar.

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“That episode with Ebola should be a warning for the government, but I’m not seeing that,” Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates for reduced immigration to the U.S., told FoxNews.com. “I’m seeing the same things— ‘nothing to worry about here, this is not going to affect us, we don’t need to have any steps in place’— and that worries me.”

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Vaughan said she predicted an increase in immigrants from Zika-afflicted countries but couldn’t quantify that prediction due to a lack of updated information. She also said she could only speculate as to whether policy in places like El Salvador and Colombia, which have advised women against pregnancy during the outbreak yet do not legally allow abortions, would impact immigration rates to the U.S.

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“I am in no way a public health expert, but I find it remarkable that officials in these countries would be recommending against having children because of the threat of this, and I think that should be an alarm for U.S. authorities to take this seriously,” Vaughan said. “It’s hard to say what the immigration implications of that would be, but I do think that one thing we know for sure is there’s currently a very large flow of people from El Salvador [who are] coming illegally, and have been able to stay,” she added, referencing Obama’s open-door policy to El Salvadorian women and children who may seeking asylum after fleeing domestic or generalized violence.

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“It’s very possible that women in El Salvador will see an opportunity to come here not only because they may see that they have more opportunity here,” she said, “but if they’re afraid that there may be some health problems with having children, they know they’re going to get better care here— or at least they can perceive it.”

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Vaughan urged the federal government to consider requiring people traveling from Zika-afflicted areas to get certified before they are allowed to enter the U.S. on a tourist or temporary visa.

“That will affect a lot of people, but that’s what immigration controls are for,” she said. “We shouldn’t hesitate to use them. SARS was a problem in Asian countries, and they had no apologies or qualms at all about imposing travel restrictions. For some reason, we have difficulty saying, ‘No’ to people.”

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Ali Noorani, executive director of the National Immigration Forum, an advocacy group for immigrants in the U.S., said restricting the U.S. economy from the rest of the world wouldn’t be worth it to try to suppress Zika.

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“When you go back to SARS— when you go back to any of these epidemics— the primary mode of transmission is really business, travel tourism, and then you get immigration,” Noorani, who received a master’s of public health in epidemiology and environmental health from Boston University, told FoxNews.com.

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Sandro Galea, dean of the school of public health at Boston University, wrote an editorial in the Boston Globe that argued against comparing Zika to Ebola. He told FoxNews.com that he believes tightening immigration restrictions would be ineffective at preventing Zika’s spread to the U.S.

“Our approach to Zika should be of prudent caution to make sure people at high risk— which is women at early stages of pregnancy should avoid areas where Zika is currently endemic,” Galea told FoxNews.com. “But using Zika as an excuse to make arguments against immigrations or those people is really based on a deep misunderstanding of the science and biology of Zika, and I think betrays pre-held views of people that are looking for an excuse to make a particular point.”

He called for more investigation into whether Zika may be sexually transmissible but said, ultimately, Zika is an arbovirus, meaning it is transmitted primarily through insects, and in this case, mosquitoes.

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“I think using Zika as an anti-immigrant push is ridiculous,” Galea said.

Noorani argued for more scientific study of Zika before health officials and the public jump to conclusions.

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“Frankly, the science needs to catch up to the information, and it just seems that there is a lot of information out there that is changing very quickly, but the science isn’t necessarily backing up the info yet,” Noorani said. “So what we want to make sure happens is, No. 1, that the science proves what the right screening measures are for the individuals who are in these countries, but most importantly that the public doesn’t panic.”

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Reply #28 posted 02/05/16 8:15am

PurpleJedi

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By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory!
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Reply #29 posted 02/05/16 8:26am

Hudson

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Won't be opening this thread again, too many gross images.

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