Health & Fitness
Two Pregnant Georgia Women Infected With Zika
The women have been added to a national registry of victims because of the risk of severe birth defects associated with the virus.

DECATUR, GA — For the first time, two pregnant women in Georgia have been reported to be infected with the Zika virus.
The women have been added to a national registry of Zika cases, according to Channel 2's report, because of the risk of birth defects associated with the virus.
In Georgia, 51 travel-related Zika cases have been reported. One of those cases was sexually transmitted.
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Georgia's first documented case of Zika came in February, when a person traveling from Colombia brought the virus to Georgia.
See also: Zika Virus Reported in Georgia
Find out what's happening in Decatur-Avondale Estatesfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The Georgia Department of Public Health confirmed that the person, referred to only as a “non-pregnant individual,” traveled to Colombia, where there has been a Zika outbreak, between the end of December and the first of January.
Testing was done by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
“It is extremely important that individuals who have traveled to countries where there are on-going Zika virus outbreaks keep guard against additional mosquito bites,” Cherie Drenzek, state epidemiologist for the department. “During the first week or so of infection, Zika virus can be passed from an infected person to another mosquito through mosquito bites. An infected mosquito can then transmit the virus to other people.”
Zika virus is most commonly spread through mosquito bites, though there have been some reports of it being sexually transmitted as well.
In adults, the symptoms of Zika are relatively mild. They include a rash, joint pain, conjunctivitis and a slight fever.
But the virus has been connected to birth defects in places it has spread, such as Brazil.
The outbreak in Brazil, which began in May of last year, led to reports of Guillain-Barre syndrome and pregnant women giving birth to babies with birth defects and other “poor pregnancy outcomes,” according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The person who reportedly brought the first case to Georgia has made a full recovery.
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