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WHO declares end of Zika virus emergency, but vigorous action still needed versus disease

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Dr. Megumi Itoh, left, an epidemic intelligence officer with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), measures the head of 5-month-old Adrielly Rufino, as she is held by her mother, Maria Girdielly, 17, as part of the CDC and Brazil's Ministry of Health case-control study investigating the association between women having the Zika virus when they are pregnant, and the effects they are seeing of microcephaly in babies. Photo: Los Angeles Times/TNS

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared on Friday that the Zika virus and related neurological complications no longer constitute an international emergency but said that it would continue to work on the outbreak through a “robust programme”.

The WHO’s Emergency Committee, which declared an international public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) in February, said in a statement that they felt that “the Zika virus and associated consequences remain a significant enduring public health challenge requiring intense action but no longer represent a PHEIC.”

A woman stands near a poster about the Zika virus at the Ministry of Health office in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Reuters
A woman stands near a poster about the Zika virus at the Ministry of Health office in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Reuters

“We are not downgrading the importance of Zika, by placing this as a longer programme of work, we are sending the message that Zika is here to stay,” Doctor Peter Salama, Executive Director of WHO’s Health Emergencies Programme, told a news briefing.

The World Health Organization is instead shifting to a longer-term approach against a virus that has spread across Latin America, the Caribbean and beyond.

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