An official with the Ministry of Health,
responding to a Pasteur Institute analysis that indicated the Kingdom is at
high risk of a Zika outbreak in 2017, yesterday said Cambodia’s health service
teams were ready to respond.
Ministry spokesman Ly Sovann said Cambodia is
employing an existing multi-source surveillance system that includes scanners
at airports and key border checkpoints to detect Zika early on. Hospitals
across the country have also been ordered to report any suspected cases.
“Our public health measures are in place to
respond to an outbreak,” said Sovann, also the director of the ministry’s
Department of Communicable Diseases. “We are ready to respond, in collaboration
with Pasteur, the World Health Organization, [the US Centers for Disease
Control] and other partners.”
The Pasteur Institute’s brief analysis,
authored by researchers Dr Didier Fontenille and Dr Philippe Dussart, was
posted on its website on October 19.
The Kingdom saw seven Zika cases from 2007 to
2010, but no recent cases have been reported, despite cases cropping up in
Vietnam, Thailand and elsewhere in the region.
Multiple attempts to get Fontenille and
Dussart to provide the basis for their conclusions over the last two days were
unsuccessful.
Sovann, meanwhile, said he couldn’t provide
an explanation himself. “We are the public health response officers and we follow
advice from our experts to be ready,” he said.
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