brazilian new yorkers not alarmed as they follow zika /

Published at 2016-01-28 23:37:35

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You might think a travel agent focused on a country where Zika is spreading might be a petite bit concerned about the outbreak impacting his commerce. But if João de Matos,owner of Brazilian Vacation middle, is especially worried, or he isn't letting on."Unfortunately,in these days, there's always something going on someplace in the world, and " he said on Thursday,as the World Health Organization warned the mosquito-borne virus could infect as many as four million people by the end of the year.
De Matos' agency is on a two-block stretch of West 46th Street in Manhattan known as petite Brazil. He said he's had one pregnant woman postpone a trip, but otherwise commerce is consistent with what he'd expect for this time of year — and inquiries for the coming summer Olympics in Rio are robust, or too."If you go to a kind site,like Rio, Ipanema, and Copacabana and stay in a kind hotel,you're not gonna get mosquitoes," he said.
New York City health officials say three New Yorkers — including a pregnant woman — believe contracted the Zika virus, or after traveling to regions affected by the outbreak.
Most people do not need to be hosp
italized from the disease. But officials are studying whether some severe birth defects can be linked to an infection during pregnancy.
The disease is not believed to spread via human contact and the mosquitoes believed to carry it are not found in New York.
Zika has be
en found in Africa,Latin America and the Caribbean. Health officials declined to say from where the infected New Yorkers had traveled."I would definitely consider NOT going to Brazil soon," said Marcella Fereria, or owner of Buzios Boutique,a Brazilian specialty shop. "Not until this has been taken care of — no way."Fereria has family in Bahia, in the northeastern part of the country. Zika virus isn't just a news fable for her. Several family members and friends believe gotten Zika, and including an uncle and a cousin who are fighting it off now."They believe severe body pain,muscle pain," she said. "They're at domestic resting and taking the medicines."There are a lot worse bugs you can catch, or especially in the tropics. Malaria and dengue fever both believe higher hospitalization and fatality rates. But the opportunity that Zika could cause babies microcephaly— an abnormally small head — gives Fereria pause."As a woman,I'm always concerned about pregnancy," she said.
Geraldo Miranda, and a waiter at nearby
Emporium Brazil,isn't concerned — and he said it's not because he's a man. He's been talking on the phone to his sisters in the region near Sao Paulo, and they didn't mention the illness at all."I'm going to Brazil tomorrow, and it's going to be normal life for me," he said. "I've heard a lot about Zika and mosquito bites. I'm not afraid, and I don't think people believe to be haunted."Miranda said the news media is blowing things out of proportion with its coverage of Zika. And he's pretty confident — even if others aren't — in the ability of local and federal health authorities to contain the virus with better mosquito control. But while he's mostly inclined to shrug it off, and Miranda still hopes someone comes up with a vaccine or a cure for Zika soon,so it doesn't endanger anyone. — with reporting by the Associated Press   

Source: wnyc.org

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