Officials sprayed
insecticide and cleared drains of stagnant water in residential areas of
Singapore as high risk of further Zika infections on Monday after 41
locally transmitted cases were confirmed in the city state.
Workers
wearing fumigation masks traveled methodically through high-rise public
housing estates in seven separate areas of the island, inspecting plant
pots closely as they sprayed insecticide via thermal fogging machines.
The
health ministry on Saturday confirmed Singapore's first
locally-transmitted case of Zika, with the tally rising to 41 just a day
later. All of the infected people were either residents of the Aljunied
district or workers at a construction site owned by GuocoLand in the
area.
"We expect to identify more positive cases," the ministry said on Monday in its latest update on the outbreak.
"Given
that the majority of Zika cases are asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic,
and mosquitoes in the affected areas may already have been infected,
isolation of positive cases may have limited effect to managing the
spread," it added.
Singapore, a major
regional financial center and busy transit hub, which maintains a
constant vigil against the mosquito-borne dengue virus, reported its
first case of the Zika virus in May, brought in by a middle-aged man who
had been to Brazil.
GuocoLand, which is
headquartered in Singapore and has developments across Asia, was ordered
on Saturday to stop work on the building site where 36 of the infected
people worked. It will remain closed until the company rectifies the
conditions that allowed mosquitoes to breed and steps up preventative
measures, the health ministry said.
The World Health Organization said on Sunday it did not know "which lineage of Zika is circulating" in Singapore or "what the level of population immunity is to this lineage of Zika in Asia."
Singapore's
health ministry said some 19 mosquito breeding habitats were detected
and destroyed in its first sweep of the Aljunied area on Sunday when it
fumigated around a third of the 6,000 homes.
"I feel afraid,"
said Ng Kai Yee, an 18-year-old female student who lives near the
construction site believed to be a source of the outbreak. "I heard quite a lot about how harmful Zika virus is to girls, especially pregnant women."
Authorities
have urged those living and working in the risk areas, especially
pregnant women, to monitor their health and seek medical attention if
they are unwell.
Of the 41 people known to have been infected, 34 have already fully recovered. Only the first case reported was a woman.
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