Argentine woman contracts Zika without leaving the country

A health official in the Argentine province of Cordoba reported on Friday that a woman had contracted the Zika virus without having left the country, bringing to nine the total number of cases reported nationwide. A major outbreak of the virus began in Brazil last year and has spread to many countries in the Americas. “We are thinking that the virus could have been transmitted sexually,” Cordoba health chief Francisco Fortuna told Radio Continental, adding that the patient had contact with a man who recently traveled to Colombia.
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Teenager near Tokyo found to have Zika virus after return from Brazil

A state health worker shows off a test tube with mosquito larvae during a fumigation as part of preventive measures against the Zika virus and other mosquito-borne diseases in MeridaA male teenager near Tokyo was found to have been infected with Zika virus after a visit to Brazil, Japan&;s first case of the infection since the virus started spreading widely in Latin America last year, the Health Ministry said on Thursday. The man stayed in Brazil for 12 days through Feb. 20 and ran a fever on his last day. "Japan at the moment is not in a season when mosquitoes are active.

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U.N. says poised for huge Syria aid effort, if the door opens

An elderly man stands along a street as he looks at an aid convoy of Syrian Arab Red Crescent and United Nation (UN) driving through the rebel held besieged city of Douma towards the besieged town of Kafr Batna to deliver aid, on the outskirts of DamascusBy Tom Miles GENEVA (Reuters) – The United Nations is ready for a huge aid effort if the warring Syria parties stop fighting, but even then aid workers will proceed carefully and assess the safety of each delivery, a U.N. spokesman said on Wednesday. "We are now standing by, our warehouses are full of aid supplies, aid agencies are alerted, and are stocking all the goods in the warehouses waiting for the signal," said Iyad Nasr, regional spokesman for the U.N. humanitarian aid office. Syria&;s war has killed over 250,000 people and left 4.5 million hard to reach with humanitarian aid, the U.N. says.

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