A tiny island nation in the South Pacific declares Zika outbreak

The tiny South Pacific kingdom of Tonga said Friday it has a Zika epidemic after five people tested positive for the virus and another 265 are suspected of having it.
 By  The Associated Press  on 
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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

The tiny South Pacific kingdom of Tonga said Friday it has a Zika epidemic after five people tested positive for the virus and another 265 are suspected of having it.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in addition to Tonga, the Pacific islands of American Samoa and Samoa have also reported Zika outbreaks and it is warning Pacific travelers to protect themselves from mosquitoes, which spread the virus.

Tonga Health Minister Dr. Saia Piukala told The Associated Press on Friday the Zika outbreak is the island's first and it is awaiting the results of more blood tests that have been sent overseas. He said many people aren't being tested because of the cost, but are being diagnosed anyway because of their symptoms.


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Piukala said there haven't been any reported cases of pregnant women contracting the virus.

"We hope that the pregnant women out there who have signs and symptoms of Zika come forward," he said.

"I'm afraid that I might catch it in my condition. I'm pregnant."

Malinoa Fainu, from Ha'ateiho village, said she'd heard about the disease on television and is trying to take precautions.

"I'm afraid that I might catch it in my condition," she said. "I'm pregnant."

Tongan health officials have started spraying bug killer in schools and other areas where people gather to try to slow the spread of the disease.

Of the five confirmed cases of Zika that originated in Tonga, three were discovered in New Zealand when people who had traveled to Tonga were tested, officials said. But New Zealand officials say there is virtually no threat of Zika there because New Zealand doesn't have the species of mosquito which is spreading the disease.

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Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

Brazilian researchers suspect the explosive spread of Zika is linked to an increase in the number of babies born with abnormally small heads, although scientists have not proven a link.

The World Health Organization this week declared the Zika virus a global emergency.

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Amanda Wills

Amanda Wills was the Deputy Executive Editor at Mashable. Amanda joined Mashable in June 2012 and was based in the company's New York headquarters.Amanda received her Bachelor of Science degree in journalism and electronic media and Spanish from the University of Tennessee.She grew up at the foot of the Smoky Mountains and has hiked all over the world - from the Appalachian Trail, to Mount Fitz Roy in Patagonia. She has also competed in a Bikram yoga competition, lived in Argentina and cheers for the UT Vols every Saturday in the fall.

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