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Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Zika Virus Guidelines Updated for Pregnant Women in Wake of New Findings : kticradio





referring to kticradio

Zika Virus Guidelines Updated for Pregnant Women in Wake of New Findings

Zika Virus Guidelines Updated for Pregnant Women in Wake of New Findings
Zika Virus Guidelines Updated for Pregnant Women in Wake of New Findings
(NEW YORK) — Pregnant women should be tested for the Zika virus with 14 days of suspected exposure to the virus or if they exhibit viral symptoms, according to updated guidelines issued Monday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.The CDC previously advised testing pregnant women within one week of exposure to the virus or if they exhibited symptoms of viral infection.Additionally, the CDC is advising pregnant women to use barrier contraception or abstain from sex if their partners, either male or female, were in an area with ongoing Zika transmission.


moreover from theguardian

Pregnant women should discuss Zika risk at every check-up, CDC says

Pregnant women should discuss Zika risk at every check-up, CDC says
Pregnant women should discuss Zika risk at every check-up, CDC says
US health officials are strongly urging doctors to ask all pregnant women about a possible Zika infection at every check-up.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has also warned that the virus can be transmitted through unprotected sex with an infected female partner.Related: 'This is why people hate Congress': politics stymies fight against Zika virusPreviously, the CDC and other experts believed the virus could only be sexually transmitted by males because it can reside in semen potentially for several months.


besides webmd

CDC Updates Zika Guidelines for Pregnant Women

CDC Updates Zika Guidelines for Pregnant Women
CDC Updates Zika Guidelines for Pregnant Women
CDC Updates Zika Guidelines for Pregnant WomenAny sex partner, male or female, has potential to pass the virus on, agency saysWebMD News from HealthDayBy HealthDay staffHealthDay ReporterMONDAY, July 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- U.S. health officials on Monday updated their Zika virus guidelines, saying that pregnant women could contract Zika from a sex partner of either gender.The virus can cause serious birth defects including microcephaly, where babies are born with abnormally small heads and brains.The new update follows news last week of the first recorded female-to-male transmission of the virus during sex.


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