Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Women Advised To Wait 2 Months To Get Pregnant After Travel To Zika Hotspots

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Mar, 2016 01:16 PM
    TORONTO — The Public Health Agency of Canada is advising women who want to get pregnant to wait at least two months after visiting countries where the Zika virus is circulating — or could begin circulating — before trying to conceive.
     
    The mosquito-borne virus has been potentially linked in Brazil to thousands of cases of newborns with abnormally small heads. It's believed mothers may have been infected during pregnancy.
     
    Cases of Zika have reached epidemic levels in that country, most of South America, throughout Central America, parts of Mexico, and much of the Caribbean.
     
    A number Canadians and Americans who travelled to the endemic areas have been diagnosed with Zika after returning home. And in a small number of cases, infected males have sexually transmitted the virus to their female partners.
     
    The federal agency says men who have travelled to Zika hotspots or to countries where the virus might start circulating should use condoms with any partner who is or could become pregnant, for two months after their return.
     
    PHAC says that until more is known, men who have a pregnant partner should consider using condoms for the duration of the pregnancy.
     
     
    "It is recommended that pregnant women and those considering becoming pregnant discuss their travel plans with their health-care provider to assess their risk and consider postponing travel to areas where the Zika virus is circulating and countries in tropical and subtropical regions where the virus has the potential to circulate," the agency says on its website.
     
    If travel cannot be postponed, PHAC says strict mosquito-bite prevention measures should be followed, including wearing clothes to cover exposed skin and using a repellent such as DEET.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nipigon River Bridge Closure Blocks Trans-Canada Highway In Northern Ontario: Ontario Mayor

    Nipigon River Bridge Closure Blocks Trans-Canada Highway In Northern Ontario: Ontario Mayor
    Damage to a newly built bridge cut traffic on the Trans-Canada Highway in both directions Sunday and it wasn't clear when it could reopen, said the mayor of a Northern Ontario community.

    Nipigon River Bridge Closure Blocks Trans-Canada Highway In Northern Ontario: Ontario Mayor

    Justin Trudeau, Canada On Agenda For International Meeting Of Economic Elites

    Justin Trudeau, Canada On Agenda For International Meeting Of Economic Elites
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will head overseas at the end of the month to sell his economic policies to international leaders and some of the world's wealthiest and most powerful people.

    Justin Trudeau, Canada On Agenda For International Meeting Of Economic Elites

    Transit Workers Reject City Offer, Vote In Favour Of Strike In Fredericton

    Transit Workers Reject City Offer, Vote In Favour Of Strike In Fredericton
    Ralph McBride of CUPE says the 43 members of Local 1783 voted 73 per cent in favour of a strike over the weekend. 

    Transit Workers Reject City Offer, Vote In Favour Of Strike In Fredericton

    Woman Dead Falling From Party Bus In Vancouver

    Woman Dead Falling From Party Bus In Vancouver
    Sgt. Randy Fincham says police received a report around 9:30 Saturday evening that a woman had fallen from a moving party bus at Burrard and West Hastings Street.

    Woman Dead Falling From Party Bus In Vancouver

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Says Document Shredding Ban Continues At Environment Department

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Says Document Shredding Ban Continues At Environment Department
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says a ban on document shredding will continue in the Environment Department until she is sure no more documents are improperly destroyed.

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Says Document Shredding Ban Continues At Environment Department

    Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks

    Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks
    Wildfires scorched a record amount of Canada's national parks last year — the latest in a number of long, hot summers that have almost entirely depleted Parks Canada's firefighting reserve.

    Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks