Indonesian Health Ministry spokesman Oscar Primadi said today that health officials are recommending that the Foreign Ministry issue an advisory against travel to Singapore, particularly for pregnant women.
Singapore issued a statement yesterday evening saying it had identified 22 new Zika cases in one particular area of the city and its first case involving a pregnant woman.
Zika has mild effects for most people but doctors believe infection during pregnancy can result in babies with small heads, which is known as microcephaly, and other serious developmental disorders. Singapore had 155 cases as of yesterday.
He said travelers will also be given a health questionnaire so they will recognize symptoms and know to immediately report to health authorities.
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Today, Malaysia's Health Ministry said a 58-year-old woman who traveled to Singapore had become that country's first Zika case.
Health Minister S Subramaniam said the woman and her husband visited Singapore for three days from August 19. The woman developed a rash a week after her return and later tested positive for Zika in her urine, he said. Her daughter in Singapore tested positive for Zika on Tuesday.
Subramaniam said the virus was believed to be imported from Singapore because the woman started experiencing symptoms on the same day as her daughter.
The ministry has started control activities such as eliminating mosquito breeding sites and fog spraying in her residential area and other places that the patient had visited.
Indonesia has not yet reported any Zika infections.
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