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CDC updates Zika recommendations

WASHINGTON — Women with confirmed cases of the Zika virus or who have had symptoms of the virus should wait at least eight weeks after the start of their symptoms before trying to get pregnant, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday.

Men with confirmed cases of the virus or who have had symptoms of the virus are now advised to wait at least six months after their symptoms begin before having unprotected sex.

These timelines update previous guidelines, based on new information learned about how long the virus stays in semen, Dr. Denise Jamieson of the CDC told reporters.

They also address new concerns about when women become pregnant, whereas previous guidelines focused on women who were already pregnant.

“We considered the longest-known risk period for these categories. We then allowed for three times the known period of time,” Jamieson said.

The CDC issued other guidelines:

Women and men without symptoms who have traveled to or had sex with someone who has traveled to a Zika-infected area are now advised to wait at least eight weeks after possible exposure to the virus before the woman tries to become pregnant, according to the guidelines.

Men who have traveled to a Zika-infected area who have not had symptoms of the virus are now advised to abstain from sex or use a condom for at least eight weeks after returning from the area.

Men who live in a Zika-infected area should use condoms or abstain from sex as long as the Zika virus is circulating there.

Women and men who do not have the virus but who live in areas where the virus is being transmitted are now advised to talk with their health care providers about plans for pregnancy during the ongoing outbreak.

The new timelines factor in new information that the virus can remain in semen for as long as to two months, Jamieson said.

They extend that to consider the longest possible risk period, she said.

The states in blue have reported cases of the Zika virus

The Zika virus, transmitted by the aggressive Aedes aegypti mosquito, has spread to at least 34 countries and territories.

The World Health Organization estimates 3 to 4 million people across the Americas will be infected in the next year.

To date, more than 273 cases of the Zika virus has been reported in the United States.

Six were sexually transmitted and 19 of those are pregnant women.

The CDC has warned pregnant women against travel to those areas.

Health officials in several of those countries are telling women to avoid pregnancy — in some cases for as long as two years.

For more information on the Zika virus from the CDC, click here.

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