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Florida identifies five cases of Zika transmission in second area of Miami

A one-square-mile area in the Little River neighborhood has been added to Miami Beach as the second active Zika transmission zone in Miami.

By Stephen Feller

MIAMI, Oct. 13 (UPI) -- A second area of Miami has been designated as a Zika transmission zone after state health officials confirmed five new locally-acquired cases of the virus.

The Florida Department of Health designated a one-square-mile area in Miami-Dade County as a Zika transmission zone, adding the Little River neighborhood to Miami Beach as areas where mosquitoes are spreading the virus.

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The addition of a second zone comes about a month after health officials dropped warnings for the Wynwood area of Miami, which was the site of the first locally-transmitted cases of Zika in the state.

Florida health officials designated Little River a transmission zone after confirming two women and three men acquired the virus in the area. Of the five people, three live in Little River and the other two either work in or have visited there.

"Today's announcement of a new area in Miami of ongoing local transmission of the Zika virus underscores the urgent need for federal funding to combat the Zika virus," Florida Governor Rick Scott said in a press release. "It has been two weeks since federal funding to fight Zika was approved by Congress and signed by President Obama. However, Florida has not yet received a dime. We don't need bureaucratic timelines -- we need funding now."

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Scott said he has asked the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to work with Miami-Dade County's Mosquito Control District to identify tactics to approach the spread of the virus in Little River.

"We have seen that aggressive mosquito control efforts have worked in areas like Wynwood and we hope the county also aggressively sprays in this area so we can limit the spread of this virus and protect pregnant women and their growing babies," Scott said.

 

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