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The Zika virus, believed to be linked to the serious birth defect microcephaly, presents a "formidable" challenge that will be hard to stamp out, World Health Organisation chief Margaret Chan said on February 24.
"Things could get worse before it gets better," she said in Rio de Janeiro after a fact-finding mission to Brazil, the epicenter of the global health scare.
Chan said part of the challenge in fighting the mosquito-borne virus was the fact that it is so "mysterious."
Even the link to microcephaly remains not fully proven. "We are dealing with a tricky virus, full of uncertainties, so we should be prepared for surprises," she said.
Brazil is the main focus of a Zika outbreak, with 1.5 million people infected, and authorities have also recorded a spike in microcephaly, a congenital condition that causes abnormally small heads and hampers brain development.
On February 23, Brazil's health ministry reported 583 confirmed cases of babies with microcephaly since October, compared to an annual average of 150. That was a 14.7 percent rise over the number of confirmed cases the previous week, and authorities were investigating another 4,107 possible cases. An estimated 120 babies have died due to the birth defect, the ministry said.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2016

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