Texas reported its first Zika-related death Tuesday after a baby girl whose mother traveled to El Salvador while pregnant died shortly after birth in a suburban Houston hospital.
The
girl, who died a few weeks ago, had microcephaly linked to the Zika
virus, said Dr. Umair Shah, executive director of Harris County Public
Health.
"We are devastated to report our first case of Zika-associated death and our hearts go out to the family," Shah said.
Test results linking the death to Zika were confirmed Friday.
The mother had traveled while pregnant to her native El Salvador and
returned to Harris County in her second trimester. Officials did not
release her name.
The
only other confirmed Zika-related death in the U.S. was that of an
elderly Utah man who died in June. He suffered from additional health
conditions.
Florida is the only U.S. state that has reported homegrown Zika transmission by mosquitoes, in Miami-Dade County.
Texas
has reported 97 Zika cases, all contracted during travel abroad. Harris
County has reported 31 Zika cases, including 14 in Houston.
Last
week, Texas officials announced that the state's Medicaid program would
provide mosquito repellent to all expectant mothers and women between
the ages of 10 and 45. Harris County Judge Ed Emmett doubted the
efficiency of that program and said he would work with local and state
officials as well as corporate partners to get the spray directly to
residents.
"How
many people are going to go get a prescription for bug spray? I think
the more realistic way is to find corporate partners and make it
happen," he said.
AP reportage
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