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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/25/2016 2:22:47 AM



Politicians are literally walking billboards for giant corporations who dish out millions of dollars in campaign contributions. This year’s campaign saw massive amounts of attention paid to this fact, and the idea that U.S. elections are actually rigged. Even if you don’t believe they’re rigged, the superdelegate process alone completely undermines democracy. Elections in the U.S. seem to be a form of entertainment, a mere distraction, more so than a real process of democracy and election. Every time elections come around, we are witnessing the illusion of democracy, and it’s not a secret. Politics, elections, and government policy are not controlled by the politicians; they seem to be the ‘fall’ people. They too take orders, and have a ‘boss.’ Above the government sit the corporations, and above them the big banks. This is the current power structure of modern day global dominance. Foster Gamble from Thrive gives an excellent visual depiction of it in this clip from the Thrive documentary.

Apart from corporate sponsors like big oil and energy companies, it’s not a secret that Hillary has the banking of those who literally control the supply of money, those who basically created this entire system. A great example comes from a $100,000 a head fundraiser at the home of Lynn Forester de Rothschild, a prominent New York businesswoman, and a member of the famous Rothschild banking family. A family that has been accused of, as Jay Syrmopoulos from The Free Thought Project puts it, “pulling the strings of many different governments through their control of various economic systems throughout the world.” Prior to this fundraiser, Wikileaks Clinton emails release shed further light on Hillary’s relationship with the Rothschild family.

Politicians are for sale. A 2014 study from Princeton University revealed that the United States is not a democracy or a republic, but rather an oligarchy where the balance of power and control of global resources lies within the hands of a very small, tight-knit group of people, and that these groups of people basically control and dictate government policy. You can see corporate influence in so many areas; the TPP is one out of many great examples .

Even the very first British MP, Benjamin Disraeli, wrote that “the world is governed by different personages to what is imagined by those who are not behind the scenes.” (Coningsby, Book 4, Chap. 15.) – Page 131

Senator Daniel K. Inouye told the world that “there exists a shadowy government with its own Air Force, its own Navy, its own fundraising mechanism, and the ability to pursue its own ideas of the national interest, free from all checks and balances, and free from the law itself.” (source)

In the informative video below, journalist Abby Martin of The Empire Files tells it like it is, explaining that Hillary Clinton is the top pick by big corporations to keep the American empire running. It has become almost commonplace to say that we live in a ‘corporatocracy,’ not a democracy, and more people are coming to understand that whoever is ‘elected’ to be president will have been selected to be there by those who control the seat of the presidency: the financial elite.

I’ll leave you with one last quote that relates to what I am getting at here.

The real menace of our Republic is the invisible government, which like a giant octopus sprawls its slimy legs over our cities, states and nation … The little coterie of powerful international bankers virtually run the United States government for their own selfish purposes. They practically control both parties … [and] control the majority of the newspapers and magazines in this country. They use the columns of these papers to club into submission or drive out of office public officials who refuse to do the bidding of the powerful corrupt cliques, which compose the invisible government. It operates under cover of a self-created screen [and] seizes our executive officers, legislative bodies, schools, courts, newspapers and every agency created for the public protection. (source)(source)

The quote above comes from John F. Hylan, who was the Mayor of New York City from 1918-1925. To see more quotes that are similiar, you can read this article.


If we want to combat environmental issues, war, poverty, and all of our other problems, we can’t keep looking to political ‘leaders’ like Obama and international organizations like the UN, who simply give their speeches as they’ve always done, year after year. None if it ever seems to change anything at all. They know of the solutions, and have known for years. These are people/organizations who act as puppets and mouthpieces for those in real power, those who apparently care little about us or the planet. The people we think are in power are like gaudy jewels meant to catch the eye and distract the mind. The people who are actually in power are clever, fooling us with words that resonate with the soul and make headlines. Dark acts are always done in the disguise of good deeds, capturing people’s hearts. Don’t continue to be bamboozled. Turn your eye away from them, change will not come from them, it never has and it never will. Change can only come from you and me. If we keep looking to them to provide the solutions and take care of our planet, the planet will continue to get trashed as it always has. It’s how we got here in the first place.

We cannot continue to give our power away and charge others with taking care of our planet. The only way things are going to change here is if we come together as one human race. Governmental policy reflects nothing but corporate interest, and we simply can’t afford to sit around much longer, letting our planet suffer.

“Democrats and republicans are two wings of the same bird, and the flight path doesn’t change.” – Unknown.

How Do We Address This Problem? What’s The Solution?

Awareness is the first step. There are still too many thinking that the United States is actually a democracy. Awareness alone has and will create a global shift in consciousness, which alters the way the masses look at the western political process. That fact that not everything is as we are told it is will continue to come to light.

Although this is just one area, politics, it’s important to at least identify the problem and it seems that we are still in the process of doing just that.

This is why it’s important to share and engage with/in alternative media.

As far as solutions go, there are many. From developments like those that could completely wipe out the fossil fuel industry and more, the solutions are there. The problem is implementation, and the tremendous power these financial elite have with regard to delaying and silencing these solutions so they can keep their place atop the pyramid.

The more we continue to be aware, pay attention, ask questions and raise our voice, the more we continue to manifest a new human experience. It’s not going to happen overnight, and although an ultimate solution to remove these people from their place of power seems to be unidentifiable right now, staying quiet is definitely not an option.

(
collective-evolution.com)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/25/2016 11:00:36 AM

The Serious Economic Warning No One Is Talking About


By Justin Spittler

On Tuesday, July 12, a huge event happened in the investing world.

But if you’re like most Americans, you probably haven’t even heard about it.

The mainstream media didn’t discuss this event much. It was too busy pointing out that the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average have hit new all-time highs.

Meanwhile, something much bigger was happening on the other side of the world.

Today, we’ll tell you what this event was…and why it means big trouble is likely on the way for investors.

Earlier in the week, the Japanese yen plummeted…

It fell 1% over Monday and Tuesday.

This might not sound like a big deal. But it was the yen’s biggest two-day slide since November 2014.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe triggered the plunge when he surprised the world with an announcement on Tuesday. Bloomberg Business reported:

The currency fell by more than 1 percent against all of its 31 major peers after Abe said he planned to add fiscal stimulus after his victory in last weekend’s upper house election. The premier indicated Tuesday he will order ministers to prepare plans for further measures aimed at supporting domestic demand.

According to The Wall Street Journal, “The prime minister is widely expected to compile a new spending package worth more than ¥10 trillion ($96 billion) in the autumn.”

“Further measures” could also include more monetary stimulus. Bloomberg explained:

BOJ [Bank of Japan] Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has repeatedly said the central bank won’t hesitate to expand stimulus. More than half of economists surveyed before the June meeting were predicting a move on July 29.

Governments often use reckless monetary policies to try to stimulate their sluggish economies…

Since the 2008 financial crisis, desperate governments have printed trillions of dollars and cut interest rates to unnaturally low levels.

But if you’ve been reading the Dispatch, you know Japan is the worst offender of all. As we’ve explained, it has gone “all in” trying to stimulate its economy, even before Abe’s big announcement.

The BOJ is currently pumping 80 trillion yen ($671 billion) into Japan’s financial system each year through quantitative easing (QE). That’s when a central bank creates money from nothing and injects it into the financial system. QE is the modern-day version of money printing.

The BOJ also introduced negative interest rates in January. Regular readers know negative rates basically flip your bank account on its head. Instead of collecting interest on the money you keep in the bank, you pay the bank to look after your money.

In short, these “stimulus” measures haven’t worked. Japan’s economy hasn’t grown since the 1990s. Its stock market is doing poorly too. The Nikkei 225, Japan’s version of the S&P 500, is down 12% this year.

And now, it looks like the BOJ is about to do something even more drastic…

Former Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke met with Abe …

As you probably know, Bernanke ran the Fed from 2006 to 2014. Under his watch, the Fed cut interest rates to effectively zero. And he pumped $3.5 trillion into the U.S. financial system using QE.

According to Bernanke, there’s still a lot more the BOJ can do to jumpstart Japan’s economy. The Wall Street Journal reported:

Bernanke rejected the notion that the Bank of Japan is short of ammunition when he met with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe Tuesday.

Mr. Bernanke noted during the face-to-face meeting that Japan’s central bank still has a range of monetary easing measures at its disposal, according to Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga.

You may also know Bernanke by his nickname, “Helicopter Ben.” He earned this nickname in 2002 when he said Japan should use “helicopter money” to jumpstart its stagnant economy.

“Helicopter money” is a highly experimental government policythat involves handing people free cash. Until recently, most economists didn’t take it seriously. But just a few months ago, Bernanke wrote that “Helicopter money could prove a valuable tool.”

This has led many folks to believe that “helicopter money” is coming to Japan. The Wall Street Journal continued:

Mr. Bernanke visited Tokyo at a time of intense speculation that Mr. Abe may resort to so-called “helicopter money,” a radical form of monetary easing advocated by the former Fed chief…

Koichi Hamada, a close adviser to Mr. Abe, said Mr. Bernanke may have discussed helicopter money with Japanese officials he met with during his visit.

Helicopter money won’t fix Japan’s economy…

It will only destroy the value of the yen.

That’s what happens when a central bank prints money. You end up with more paper currency chasing the same amount of goods and services. Everything from a gallon of milk to a new house costs more.

Consider what’s recently happened in Venezuela and Argentina. As we explained last month,these countries tried to jumpstart their economies using helicopter money. Both times, it sparked a full-blown currency crisis.

Inflation in Argentina is currently running about 40% per year. It’s even worse in Venezuela.

Last year, inflation in Venezuela hit a record high of 181%. And it’s only heading higher. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), inflation in Venezuela could skyrocket to 1,642% next year.

The same thing will happen to the yen if the BOJ continues to recklessly print money.

If you have money in Japanese bonds or yen, we encourage you to get it out as soon as possible.

But Japan isn’t the only government you need to worry about…

Every major central bank in the world has gone overboard with easy money.

According to MarketWatch, central banks have cut rates more than 650 times since the 2008 financial crisis. They’ve “printed” more than $12 trillion.

Eventually, central bankers will destroy the paper currencies they’re supposed to defend.

That’s why it’s critical to own gold today, before it’s too late.

As we often remind you, gold is real money. It’s preserved wealth for centuries because it has a rare set of attributes: It’s durable, easy to transport, and easily divisible. Its value doesn’t depend on a government or central bank. That’s why the price of gold often soars when governments do reckless things like print money.

This year, gold is up 26%. It’s trading at the highest level in two years. But it will likely head much higher. Casey Research Founder Doug Casey says gold prices could easily triple in the coming years.

To learn why, watch this short presentation. It explains why the world is in the early stages of a global currency crisis. By the end, you’ll understand why we’ve been pounding the table about gold so much recently. Click here to watch this free video.

Chart of the Day

Japanese banks are trading like a major crisis is coming.

Regular readers know we watch bank stocks closely. That’s because banks are pillars of the global financial system. They keep money flowing through the economy. If they’re in trouble, it often means something is wrong with the financial system.

If you’ve been reading the Dispatch, you know that’s exactly what bank stocks have been saying lately. As we’ve shown readers, many of the world’s biggest bank stocks have crashed recently. Some are now in free fall. For example, Deutsche Bank (DB), Germany’s biggest lender, has plunged 52% over the past year. Swiss banking giant UBS (UBS) is down 56%.

This selloff has hit European banks the hardest. But, as you can see below, Japanese banks have crashed too.

Today’s chart shows the performance of the TOPIX Banks Index over the past year. This index tracks Japan’s biggest banks. You can see that it’s plunged 40% since last July. This tells us Japan’s banking system has serious problems…and it’s another reason to be concerned about a global banking crisis.


(activistpost.com)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/25/2016 11:34:38 AM

The World Health Organization has declared an international health emergency over the spread of the Zika virus, now known to cause devastating birth defects. The agency expects the virus to spread from northern Argentina to the southern United States by the end of the year, infecting many millions of people.

The W.H.O. and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have urged pregnant women against travel to more than 45 countries in which the Zika virus is spreading, mostly in the Caribbean and Latin America. All pregnant women who have been to these regions should be tested for the infection, health officials have said, and should refrain from unprotected sex with partners who have visited these regions.

The Zika virus has been linked to unusually small heads and brain damage in newborns — called microcephaly — in children born to infected mothers, as well as blindness, deafness, seizures and other congenital defects. In adults, the virus is linked to a form of temporary paralysis, called Guillain-Barré syndrome.

Here are some answers and advice about the outbreak.

  1. United

    States

    ZIKA VIRUS

    Egypt

    Mexico

    India

    Kenya

    Indonesia

    Brazil

    Areas with current or past evidence of Zika

    Angola

    Easter

    Island

    1.What is the Zika virus?
    A tropical infection new to the Western Hemisphere.

    The Zika virus is a mosquito-transmitted infection related to dengue, yellow fever and West Nile virus. Although it was discovered in the Zika forest in Uganda in 1947 and is believed to be common across Africa and Asia, it did not begin spreading widely in the Western Hemisphere until recently — perhaps sometime in 2013, although its presence was not confirmed until May 2015, when it was identified as the “mystery disease” sweeping across northeast Brazil.

    Almost no one in the Americas is immune, so it has spread rapidly.

    About four in five victims have no symptoms, and those who do usually recover within a week. Common symptoms include a fever rarely higher than 102 degrees, an itchy pink rash, bloodshot eyes, sensitivity to light, headaches and joint pains.

  2. 2 Infected blood

    travels to the midgut.

    1 Mosquito feeds on

    virus-infected blood.

    3 Virus enters the

    circulatory system ...

    How mosquitoes

    spread Zika

    Aedes aegypti

    mosquito

    PATH OF

    THE VIRUS

    4 ... and travels to

    the salivary glands.

    5 Mosquito bites again, injecting virus-

    infected saliva into victim before feeding.

    2.How does a mosquito transmit Zika?
    The virus moves from its gut to its salivary glands.

    Only female mosquitoes bite people: they need blood to lay eggs, while males drink plant nectar. In the female, the virus travels from the gut to the salivary glands and is injected into the next human victim. When a mosquito bites, it first injects an anti-coagulant saliva so blood does not clog its strawlike proboscis.

  3. UNITED

    STATES

    ATLANTIC

    OCEAN

    MEXICO

    VENEZUELA

    PANAMA

    COLOMBIA

    PACIFIC

    OCEAN

    ECUADOR

    BRAZIL

    PERU

    BOLIVIA

    100%

    Probable range

    of the yellow

    fever mosquito,

    Aedes aegypti

    PARAGUAY

    50%

    0%

    ARGENTINA

    3.What areas is Zika likely to reach?
    Wherever certain mosquitoes go.

    Zika is spread by mosquitoes of the Aedes genus, which can breed in a pool of water as small as a bottle cap and usually bite in daytime. The yellow fever mosquito, Aedes aegypti, takes several bites for each blood meal and prefers biting people; it accounts for most Zika infections. This mosquito is common in the United States typically only in Florida and along the Gulf Coast, although it has been found as far north as Connecticut in hot weather.

    The Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, also can transmit the virus, but not as effectively. It bites many kinds of animals and is found as far north as Maine and Minnesota in summer, and also in Hawaii.

  4. 4.Can the Zika virus be sexually transmitted?
    Yes.

    Although experts believe that the vast majority of Zika infections are transmitted by mosquitoes, sexual transmission has been reported in 10 countries, including the United States, France, Germany, Italy and New Zealand.

    In all known cases as of late June, transmission has been from a man to a woman or to another man, not from a woman to anyone else. The Zika virus has clearly been transmitted by vaginal and anal sex, and possibly by oral sex.

    Viral RNA has been found in semen more than two months after symptoms disappeared. Scientists believe the prostate or testes serve as a reservoir, sheltering the Zika virus from the immune system. In at least one case, a man who never had Zika symptoms transmitted it sexually.

    Health authorities now recommend that women who are pregnant or trying to become pregnant avoid contact with semen from men who have visited areas where the virus is transmitted. Pregnant women should abstain until they give birth, or should have sex only with partners using a condom.

    To reduce the risk of sexual transmission, health authorities recommend that men who have visited areas in which the Zika virus is transmitted by mosquitos and who have had symptoms avoid unprotected sex for six months. Men who have had no symptoms should wait eight weeks.

  5. 5.How might Zika cause brain damage in infants?
    Experts aren’t yet certain.
    Although it is known that the virus causes brain damage, the mechanism is still being studied. The virus can cross the placenta and attack fetal nerve cells, including some that develop into the brain. The radial glial cells, which form the initial “scaffolding” that guides other fetal brain cells into place, appear particularly vulnerable.
  6. 16.

    Is there a treatment?
    No.

    The C.D.C. does not recommend a particular antiviral medication for people infected with the Zika virus. The symptoms are mild – when they appear at all – and usually require only rest, nourishment and other supportive care.

    1. 6.What is microcephaly?
      An usually small head, often accompanied by brain damage.

      Babies with microcephaly have unusually small heads. Normally, some degree of microcephaly occurs in 1 in 5,000 to 1 in 10,000 of all births. In roughly 15 percent of cases, a small head is just a small head, with no effect on the infant.

      But infection with the Zika virus causes a severe form of microcephaly. The brain may stop growing and be small and smooth, lacking the normal indentations. The long nerves connecting the eyes and ears to the brain may be damaged. Children may suffer from constant seizures or be born with permanently rigid limbs.

      Microcephaly can also be caused by other infections of the fetus, including German measles (also known as rubella), toxoplasmosis (a disease caused by a parasite found in undercooked meat and cat feces) and cytomegalovirus.

      Microcephaly may also result from alcoholism, drug use or some industrial toxins during pregnancy, or from severe malnutrition of the mother. It can be caused by complications of diabetes and by the genes like those that cause Down syndrome.

      There is no treatment for the brain damage.

      “There is no way to fix the problem, just therapies to deal with the downstream consequences,” said Dr. Hannah M. Tully, a neurologist at Seattle Children’s Hospital who specializes in brain malformations.

    2. United States

      Haiti

      Dominican Republic

      Puerto Rico

      Guadeloupe

      St. Martin

      Martinique

      Barbados

      U.S. Virgin Islands

      Curaçao

      Trinadad and Tobago

      ATLANTIC

      OCEAN

      Mexico

      Cuba

      Jamaica

      Guatemala

      Honduras

      El Salvador

      Nicaragua

      Costa Rica

      Guyana

      Suriname

      French Guiana

      Venezuela

      Panama

      Colombia

      Ecuador

      PACIFIC

      OCEAN

      Brazil

      Peru

      Areas

      pregnant women

      should avoid

      Bolivia

      Paraguay

      Argentina

      Note: American Samoa, Cape Verde, Tonga and the Marshall Islands should also be avoided.

      7.What places should pregnant women avoid?
      More than 45 countries and territories, mostly in the Americas and South Pacific.

      World health authorities expect the outbreak to eventually reach every place in the Americas where the Aedes aegypti mosquito has previously spread the dengue virus. That includes everywhere from Florida and the Gulf Coast to northern Argentina. Hawaii may be affected as well. Some Pacific Islands are now having outbreaks.

      Even within those countries, according to the C.D.C., pregnant women can safely visit areas at altitudes above 6,500 feet because mosquitoes are not normally found there. The latest C.D.C. updates are here.

    3. 8.How do I know if I’ve been infected? Is there a test?
      It’s often a silent infection and hard to diagnose.

      Only one of five infected people develop symptoms. There is currently no rapid test that can be done in a doctor’s office; tests must be sent to sophisticated laboratories, which delays diagnosis.

      The surest way to detect the virus itself is with a blood or urine sample gathered in the first two weeks or less after symptoms appear. Antibody tests can be done later but, because the disease is closely related to dengue and yellow fever, false positives and false negatives may occur, especially in areas where those diseases circulate. More complex “neutralization assay testing” can lower the false-positive rate, but not eliminate it.

    4. 9.I’m pregnant and live in or recently visited a country with Zika virus. What do I do?
      Pregnant women should get blood tests and ultrasound scans.

      According to the C.D.C., all pregnant women who have visited areas with Zika transmission should be tested, whether or not they have symptoms.

      All pregnant women who live in those areas, such as Puerto Rico or American Samoa, should be tested at least twice during their pregnancies, whether or not they have symptoms.

      All pregnant women who test positive or had symptoms should have a series of ultrasounds looking for evidence of fetal microcephaly or calcifications, small white spots indicating cell death or inflammation in the brain.

      Brain damage has been detected as early as week 19 of a pregnancy — about midway through the second trimester. But it is not clear how quickly damage becomes detectable after an infection.

      The current guidelines are here.

    5. 10.I’m of childbearing age, but not pregnant and not planning to get pregnant. Should I go to an affected country?
      Only if you use birth control consistently.

      Half of pregnancies are unintended, according to some surveys. If you want to visit a country where Zika transmission has been reported, Dr. Laura E. Riley, a specialist in high-risk pregnancies at Massachusetts General Hospital, advises strict use of birth control.

      Women who become unexpectedly pregnant while traveling or shortly afterward will have to deal with blood tests, regular ultrasounds and a great deal of anxiety.

      “Why would you ever sign yourself up for that?” Dr. Riley said. “There’s enough in life to worry about. I wouldn’t add that to my list.”

    6. 11.I’m pregnant now, but wasn’t when I visited one of the affected countries. What’s the risk?
      Virtually nil.

      Women who recover from the infection are believed to immune to it, so no harm can come to a new baby.

      To be sure no virus is in the blood even after a silent infection, the C.D.C. recommends waiting eight weeks — triple the amount of time the virus has been known to persist — before trying to conceive.

      Whether that immunity is lifelong is not yet known, because the virus has only been studied carefully for a brief time. But it is believed to be long-lasting.

      “Our understanding thus far is that the risk is very, very low if you were in that place prior to conception,” Dr. Riley, of Massachusetts General Hospital, said.

      “I wouldn’t be worried about if you conceived after you got back to the U.S.”

    7. 12.If I live in an area where the virus is circulating, should I delay becoming pregnant?
      That may be wise, some officials say.

      Health officials in several countries, including Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvadorand Jamaica — and in the territory of Puerto Rico — have suggested that women delay pregnancy temporarily. Obstetricians in some countries are privately giving patients the same advice, saying the risk of fetal damage during an epidemic’s peak is too great.

      Once “herd immunity” is strong because many people have been bitten and have recovered, local epidemics may fade out, so that women can safely become pregnant again. Also, many companies are working on Zika vaccines, and delaying pregnancy will buy time for them to arrive.

      Both the W.H.O. and the C.D.C. approach the topic very cautiously, but the C.D.C. has said that some women and their partners, in consultation with their doctors, “might decide to delay pregnancy” and should be provided with contraception if they do. TheW.H.O. says that men and women “should consider delaying pregnancy and follow recommendations (including the consistent use of condoms) to prevent H.I.V., other sexually transmitted infections, and unwanted pregnancies.”

    8. Photo

      Gleyse Kelly da Silva holding her daughter, Maria Giovanna, who was born with microcephaly in Recife, Brazil. The birth defect has been linked to the Zika virus. CreditFelipe Dana/Associated Press
      13.Does it matter when in her pregnancy a woman is infected with the Zika virus?
      Anytime during pregnancy may be dangerous.

      Originally, doctors in Brazil believed that infections in the first trimester were the most dangerous, because mothers who gave birth to babies with microcephaly were usually infected then.

      A later study found that some mothers infected late in pregnancy also had disastrous outcomes, including the sudden deaths of infants in the womb.

      Some experts who have studied the long-term consequences of rubella — another virus that attacks fetuses — say they believe that children who survive a Zika infection without microcephaly nonetheless may suffer serious consequences, including blindness and deafness at birth, learning and behavior difficulties in childhood, and perhaps even mental disabilities later in life.

    9. 14.Should infants be tested?
      Other birth defects may be linked to the virus.

      Federal health officials say that newborns should be tested for infection with the Zika virus if their mothers have visited or lived in any country experiencing an outbreak and if the mothers’ own tests are positive or inconclusive.

      The reason, officials said, is that infection with the virus could be linked to defects in vision and hearing, among other abnormalities, even if the child does not suffer microcephaly.

    10. 15.I’m a man and have returned from a place where the Zika virus is spreading. How long until I can be sure that I won’t infect a sexual partner?
      Err on the side of caution.

      Whether or not you have had symptoms, you should do everything you can to avoid infecting a woman who may be pregnant or is trying to become pregnant, because the consequences for the baby may be disastrous.

      To do that, you must avoid vaginal, anal and oral sex for the length of the pregnancy — or use condoms every time.

      It is not known how long the Zika virus remains infectious in semen, but viral RNA has been found in semen more than two months after symptoms subsided. The testes are somewhat shielded from the immune system, so it may take longer for the body to eliminate an infection there.

      The C.D.C. recommends that men who have traveled to Zika-infected areas, but had no symptoms, wait eight weeks before having unprotected sex.

      Men who have had a positive Zika test or any symptoms of infection, on the other hand, should wait six months.

      At least one gay man has infected his male partner through anal sex. Another man is believed to have infected his female partner through oral sex.

      And in one case in France, a man who never reported symptoms is believed to have infected his wife through sex.

  7. Health workers sprayed insecticide in the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro as part of a campaign to combat mosquitoes, which transmit the Zika virus.
    17.Is there a vaccine? How should people protect themselves?
    Protection is difficult in mosquito-infested regions.

    There is no vaccine against the Zika virus. Efforts to make one have just begun, and creating and testing a vaccine normally takes years and costs hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Because it is impossible to completely prevent mosquito bites, the C.D.C. has advised pregnant women to avoid going to regions where the virus is being transmitted, and has advised women thinking of becoming pregnant to consult doctors before going.

    Travelers to these countries are advised to avoid or minimize mosquito bites by staying in screened or air-conditioned rooms or sleeping under mosquito nets; wearing insect repellent at all times; and wearing long pants, long sleeves, shoes and hats.

    1. How Zika Spread

      Around the World

      Pakistan

      Nigeria

      Before 2007

      Costa Rica

      Uganda

      Indonesia

      2007-2014

      Yap (Micronesia)

      Thailand

      Gabon

      French Polynesia

      Easter Island

      2015-2016

      Mexico

      Cape

      Verde

      Brazil

      Maldives

      Fiji

      18.If the Zika virus has been in Africa and Asia for decades, why wasn’t a link to microcephaly detected earlier?
      It may be that the virus had never struck such a large population without immunity.

      Microcephaly is rare, and it has many other causes, including infection of the fetus with rubella (German measles), cytomegalovirus or toxoplasmosis; poisoning of the fetus by alcohol, mercury or radiation; or severe maternal malnutrition and diabetes. It is also caused by several gene mutations, including Down syndrome.

      Until recently, health officials paid little attention to the Zika virus. It circulated in the same regions as dengue and chikungunya, and compared with those two painful infections – nicknamed “break-bone fever” and “bending-up fever” – Zika was usually mild.

      The virus is thought to have reached Asia from Africa at least 50 years ago. While it may have caused spikes in microcephaly as it first spread, there was no testing to pin down which of many possible causes was to blame.

      In 2007, a Southeast Asian strain of the Zika virus began leapfrogging the South Pacific, sparking rapid outbreaks on islands where no one had immunity to it. Because island populations are small, rare side effects did not occur often enough to be noticed. But in 2013, during an outbreak in French Polynesia, which has 270,000 residents, doctors confirmed 42 cases of Guillain-Barrê syndrome, which can cause paralysis. That was about eight times the normal number and the first hint that the Zika virus can attack the nervous system, which includes the brain.

      Zika was first confirmed in Brazil – a country of 200 million – last May, and it spread rapidly. The first alarms about microcephaly were raised in October, when doctors in the northeastern state of Pernambuco reported a surge in babies born with it. Pernambuco has nine million people and 129,000 annual births. In a typical year, nine are microcephalic infants.

      By November 2015, when Brazil declared a health emergency, Pernambuco had had 646 such births.

    2. 19.Has a Zika outbreak outside Brazil ever been linked to microcephaly?
      Officials in French Polynesia have suspicions about an outbreak two years ago.

      French Polynesia is the only area outside Brazil to be affected by a Zika outbreak in which public health officials have identified an increase in the number of fetuses and babies with unusually small heads. There is “very high suspicion” of a link between the Zika virus and microcephaly in French Polynesia, said Dr. Didier Musso, an infectious disease specialist at the archipelago’s Institut Louis Malardé – though he said additional research was needed.

      In November, French Polynesian officials took another look at an outbreak of the Zika virus that lasted from October 2013 to April 2014. They reported finding an unusual increase – from around one case annually to 17 cases in 2014-15 – of unborn babies developing “central nervous system malformations,” a classification that includes microcephaly.

      There were no investigations at the time to determine whether the mothers were infected with the Zika virus during pregnancy. Four of the mothers were tested later, and the results indicated they may have been infected. Additional research is underway, Dr. Musso said.


      (The New York Times)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/25/2016 5:07:15 PM
Lifelong care, heartaches ahead for babies born with Zika in the U.S.

At least 12 babies in the United States have already been born with the heartbreaking brain damage caused by the Zika virus. And with that number expected to multiply, public health and pediatric specialists are scrambling as they have rarely done to prepare for the lifelong implications of each case.

Many of Zika’s littlest victims, diagnosed with microcephaly and other serious birth defects that might not immediately be apparent, could require care estimated at more than $10 million through adulthood. Officials who have been concentrating on measures to control and prevent transmission of the virus are now confronting a new challenge, seeking to provide guidance for doctors and others who work with young children with developmental problems.

The White House and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are holding regular talks with experts and nonprofits about the array of services the infants and their families will need well into the future. Advocacy groups are seeking to raise awareness among parents and day-care providers, and some high-risk states are streamlining existing programs so that they can rapidly connect Zika babies with physical, occupational and other therapies.

On Thursday and Friday, CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics convened a special meeting in Atlanta to establish guidelines on how to evaluate and care for infants whose mothers were infected with the virus during pregnancy. They heard ophthalmologist Camila Ventura of Brazil, the epicenter of Zika in the Americas, describe how extremely irritable, even inconsolable, the newborns with microcephaly are.

“The babies cannot stop crying,” she said.



Carla Severina de Silva's husband left her after their baby was diagnosed with microcephaly, now Carla is fighting for her daughter's future.
(Whitney Leaming, Matt McClain/The Washington Post)

Just as daunting is the question of how to best monitor those exposed in utero but without obvious abnormalities at birth. Vision and hearing problems can surface, as can seizure disorders.

“That uncertainty and lack of information will be very stressful for the families,” CDC physician Kate Russell said.

The urgency of these discussions increased after Congress adjourned in mid-July without taking action on additional Zika funding. Lawmakers will not return to Washington until September.

“People have been so focused on prevention,” said Katy Neas of Easter Seals, a nonprofit that provides services to children and adults with disabilities. “Now we’re getting to ‘Holy moly, we’re actually going to have kids here with Zika, and what do we need to do?’ ”

Federal and local health officials are monitoring at least 400 pregnant women with Zika in the 50 states and the District, up from 346 a week ago, and another 378 pregnant women in the U.S. territories, most of them in Puerto Rico. In addition to the babies already born with Zika-
related problems — the latest was announced Friday by New York City health officials — at least six women have lost or terminated pregnancies because their fetuses suffered brain defects from the virus.

Florida is investigating two possible cases of locally transmitted Zika — the first in any state. Should the virus spread there or elsewhere in the region, it would be the first outbreak linked to serious birth defects since the 1964 rubella outbreak that killed 2,100 babies and left 20,000 others at risk of deafness, heart damage and microcephaly.

“It’s been more than 50 years since we’ve seen an epidemic of birth defects linked to a virus — and never before have we seen this result from a mosquito bite,” said Margaret Honein, chief of CDC’s birth defects branch.

But unlike with rubella, the vast majority of people with Zika have no symptoms. That poses enormous diagnostic challenges because the most accurate tests need to occur within the first two weeks of infection. Also unlike rubella, researchers do not truly know the magnitude of risk for a pregnant woman passing Zika to her fetus.

“This is new territory,” said Anne Schuchat, CDC’s deputy director, with public health officials simultaneously having to learn about Zika’s grave impact on fetuses while devising interventions for the consequences. “We’re trying to prepare ourselves and prepare pregnant women for when those babies are born and what should happen to them.”

In addition to microcephaly, a rare condition usually characterized by an abnormally small head and underdeveloped brain, Zika can cause neurological harm affecting vision, hearing, and muscle and bone development, research shows. The range of impairment can be vast. Some babies lack the most basic sucking reflex, which means they might never develop the ability to swallow.

Even in babies who look “absolutely fine” at birth, ongoing screening may be necessary to detect subtle changes that could signal serious problems. Abnormal movement and prolonged staring, for example, could indicate an emerging seizure disorder.

Developmental specialist Stephanie Honorat, center, and psychologist Michelle Berkovits work with Taylor Moore during her development evaluation. (Scott McIntyre/For The Washington Post)
Honorat, left, checks Taylor’s movements as her mother, Rochelle Beckom, looks on. The Miami clinic assesses more than 3,500 children a year. (Scott McIntyre/For The Washington Post)

“You have to really follow them and check,” explained V. Fan Tait, deputy director of child health and wellness for the American Academy of Pediatrics. “What do you need to do for the evaluation, and who else needs to be involved? . . . We know the worst-case scenario, but what we don’t know is the continuum.”

Although the pediatric neurologist acknowledged that it is unclear how many children could be affected, “in my mind, it will stretch the system that we have to care for them,” she said.

Federal law requires every state to have an early intervention program that offers services to eligible infants and toddlers up to 36 months old who have significant developmental delays or conditions likely to result in such delays. The programs, typically funded with state and federal dollars, represent a critical support system for children with complex needs.

In Florida, which has 46 pregnant women with Zika, officials recently decided that any child with a confirmed Zika diagnosis automatically qualifies for early screening and intervention.

“We’re anticipating this is going to be a major problem,” said Charles Bauer, a professor of pediatrics and neonatology at the University of Miami Mailman Center for Child Development. The university runs one of the state’s 15 Early Steps programs, and its pediatricians, psychologists and other specialists see more than 3,500 infants and toddlers a year.

“We’re trying to prepare ourselves to identify these babies and get them into services as soon as possible,” Bauer said. “This is a new category of at-risk baby.”

Children in the university’s program are evaluated by specialists, such as Silvia Fajardo Hiriart, a pediatrician, and Michelle Berkovits, a psychologist. Each goes through a series of physical and neurological tests to gauge developmental milestones. The team checks to see that babies are batting at toys at about 3 months old, sitting on their own by 9 months and saying their first words by about their first birthday.

The program also helps mothers go through the grieving process.

“What we see with most of our moms is that they lost their expected normal baby,” Fajardo Hiriart said. “We try to focus on what their child is doing and focus on the positive and provide support.”

With Zika, that support will be harder. It is a new disease. No one knows how a child’s development will be affected in the long term.

Parents of a child with autism or Down syndrome can turn to well-established organizations offering resources and showcasing successes, but Zika-affected families have no such help. At least not yet.

“For a family, it’s going to be more isolating because . . . there’s not a support group,” Berkovits said.

Across the South and Southwest, where the mosquito that is the primary carrier of Zika is endemic, advocates and officials are worried about the ability of private and state systems to handle more children with special needs.

Many Early Steps programs in Florida, for instance, are near capacity and already struggle to meet the federal requirement that all children be evaluated within 45 days of referral for developmental delays, Bauer said.

The exploding prevalence of Zika in Puerto Rico could be a further strain if new mothers there begin seeking care for their babies on the mainland. Several dozen pregnant women are being infected daily on the island, CDC officials said.

But many parents might not have alternatives. The parts of the South that are most vulnerable to the virus are home to some of the nation’s poorest mothers with the least access to health care.

“In Miami, you may have access to a full range of specialists, but if you’re on the Gulf Coast, in a small town in Alabama, forget it,” said Cynthia Pellegrini, a senior vice president at the March of Dimes Foundation.

Funding for support services often is low, is rarely assured and varies tremendously by state. Only intervention by the Texas Supreme Court delayed $350 million in Medicaid program cuts from taking effect recently. Lawmakers there had approved the cuts last year, putting physical, speech and occupational therapies to disabled children at risk.

In confronting a disease that has no treatment, experts said it may take years to fully grasp the damage Zika does over a child’s lifetime.

“We’re at the beginning of the process of discovery. We’re going to find out more and more unsettling issues about this virus,” said Irwin Redlener, a Columbia University public health professor and president of the Children’s Health Fund, which assists disadvantaged children. “There’s going to be a significant uptick in the babies with the obvious consequences, like microcephaly, and an unknown uptick in babies with more subtle problems that have to be assessed.”

(The Washington Post)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/25/2016 5:41:33 PM

Tens of thousands of babies 'may be born with Zika disorders'

Mariëtte Le RouxJuly 25, 2016

The brain-damaging disorder microcephaly, linked to the Zika virus, can lead to stillbirth or severely disabling birth defects (AFP Photo/Christophe Simon)

Paris (AFP) - Tens of thousands of babies may be born with debilitating Zika-related disorders in the course of the outbreak sweeping through Latin America and the Caribbean, researchers said Monday.

Mathematical projections suggest about 93.4 million people may catch the virus -- including some 1.65 million pregnant women -- before the epidemic fizzles out, a team reported in the journal Nature Microbiology.

Eighty percent of people will develop mild symptoms or never even be aware they have the virus.

But for babies in the womb Zika can be devastating -- linked to a brain-damaging disorder called microcephaly that can lead to stillbirth or severely disabling birth defects.

Among women in a high-risk early term of pregnancy, anything between one and 13 percent have foetuses develop microcephaly or other Zika-related complications, said the multidisciplinary research team from the United States, Britain and Sweden.

This meant "somewhere on the order of tens of thousands across the whole of Latin America and the Caribbean who could realistically end up developing microcephaly or a related condition," said study co-author Alex Perkins of the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, and specified this referred to "live births."

The projection was "a worst-case scenario" he told AFP, "but a realistic one".

It did not account for women who may be postponing conception or having abortions as a result of the outbreak.

"I know that does not provide a very precise number, but I think it's valuable in that at least it gives an order of magnitude guess, which is better than having no idea whatsoever."

The team used data on the usual number of pregnancies, the prevalence of the mosquito species spreading the virus, weather conditions and socio-economic conditions that make people more vulnerable, and disease spread dynamics.

- Conservative estimate? -

Mathematical models of disease progression are notoriously prone to inaccuracies, as estimates can be skewed by such factors as the infectiousness of the virus, the adaptative response of the immune system and social and economic factors that help it to spread.

Experts not involved in the study said the new estimate may be conservative.

Derek Gatherer of Lancaster University noted recent research which found that as many as 29 percent of babies of Zika-infected mothers develop problems.

If so, "over half a million" children may ultimately be affected, he said.

Whatever the final number, a support system for affected babies and their families "needs to be put in place as soon as possible," said Jimmy Whitworth of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

"Over 1,700 affected babies have been born in Brazil so far, and the numbers are going to continue to increase in the months ahead," he said in comments via the Science Media Centre.

The research team predicted Olympics host Brazil will suffer more than double the impact of any other country, with about 580,000 pregnant women out of 37.4 million total infections.

Other affected countries include Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, Cuba, Haiti, Argentina and the Dominican Republic.

Another recent study had put the annual number of pregnancies in the Zika-affected region at about 5.4 million.

But many of those, the new paper said, would not be affected by Zika, due to the effects of "herd immunity".

This is a natural process whereby people become immune to a virus after their first exposure, eventually reaching the point where mosquitoes cannot find enough susceptible people to keep the epidemic going, and it dies out without infecting everyone.

Earlier this month, a study in the American journal Science predicted the outbreak should be over within three years.

The virus, first discovered in Uganda in 1947, took the world by surprise when it emerged, and with such virulence, in Latin America last year.

There is no cure or vaccine.


(Yahoo News)


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