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News / Health

Florida finds Zika in trapped mosquitoes

First virus-positive insect pool on U.S. mainland

By CURT ANDERSON, Associated Press
Published: September 1, 2016, 6:15pm

MIAMI — Authorities in Florida said Thursday they have found the Zika virus in three groups of trapped mosquitoes in Miami Beach, the first time this has happened in the continental U.S.

The Zika-carrying mosquitoes were trapped in a 1.5-square-mile area of Miami Beach that had been identified as an active zone of active transmission of the virus, the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said in a news release.

“This is the first time we have found a Zika virus-positive mosquito pool in the continental United States,” said Erin Sykes, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.

Finding the virus in mosquitoes has been likened by the CDC to finding a needle in a haystack, but the testing helps mosquito controllers target their efforts, and it confirms that the insects are indeed a mode of transmission. The illness spreads from people to mosquitoes to people again through bites, but the insects do not spread it among their own population, and their lifespan is just a few weeks.

The announcement was made Thursday as a poll was released suggesting nearly 48 percent of Americans are wary of traveling to U.S. destinations where people have been infected with Zika through mosquito bites.

The survey of health care attitudes by the Kaiser Family Foundation also found 61 percent felt uneasy about traveling to Zika zones outside the U.S. mainland, including Puerto Rico.

Most of the Zika infections from Florida mosquitoes have been in the Miami area, not the tourist mecca of Orlando.

But Miami is a major tourism draw, with more than 15.5 million people making overnight visits to the city and its nearby beaches last year. Florida set a new record for tourism with more than 105 million people from out of state and other countries visiting in 2015.

“This find is disappointing, but not surprising,” Commissioner of Agriculture Adam H. Putnam said in a statement Thursday. “Florida is among the best in the nation when it comes to mosquito surveillance and control, and this detection enables us to continue to effectively target our resources.”

In Florida, officials said Miami-Dade County, the City of Miami Beach, and state and federal agencies are continuing to work aggressively to prevent Zika’s spread. The county’s mosquito control team is inspecting properties to remove standing water where the bugs breed, and spraying in a 1/8-mile radius around the area where the infected mosquitoes were trapped.

Officials said 95 more mosquito samples — each one containing several dozen bugs — have tested negative since those three were found.

“As it has been from the beginning, our goal is to eliminate the cycle of transmission by eliminating the mosquitoes,” Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos A. Gimenez said in the news release.

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