AI Article Synopsis

  • Zika has become a significant public health concern in Latin America and the Caribbean due to its association with congenital syndromes, with over 217,000 cases reported by August 2017.
  • Researchers utilized a statistical approach to project future Zika cases, estimating about 12.3 million cases annually, which could lead to thousands of cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome and microcephaly.
  • The economic impact of these health issues is projected to reach approximately USD 2.3 billion per year, highlighting the need for effective public health strategies.

Article Abstract

Background: Zika is one of the most challenging emergent vector-borne diseases, yet its future public health impact remains unclear. Zika was of little public health concern until recent reports of its association with congenital syndromes. By 3 August 2017 ∼217,000 Zika cases and ∼3,400 cases of associated congenital syndrome were reported in Latin America and the Caribbean. Some modelling exercises suggest that Zika virus infection could become endemic in agreement with recent declarations from the The World Health Organisation.

Methodology/principal Findings: We produced high-resolution spatially-explicit projections of Zika cases, associated congenital syndromes and monetary costs for Latin America and the Caribbean now that the epidemic phase of the disease appears to be over. In contrast to previous studies which have adopted a modelling approach to map Zika potential, we project case numbers using a statistical approach based upon reported dengue case data as a Zika surrogate. Our results indicate that ∼12.3 (0.7-162.3) million Zika cases could be expected across Latin America and the Caribbean every year, leading to ∼64.4 (0.2-5159.3) thousand cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome and ∼4.7 (0.0-116.3) thousand cases of microcephaly. The economic burden of these neurological sequelae are estimated to be USD ∼2.3 (USD 0-159.3) billion per annum.

Conclusions/significance: Zika is likely to have significant public health consequences across Latin America and the Caribbean in years to come. Our projections inform regional and federal health authorities, offering an opportunity to adapt to this public health challenge.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5683651PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006007DOI Listing

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