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Keanu

Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele, a.k.a. the hugely popular comedy duo Key & Peele, star as Clarence and Rell, two cousins who live in the city but are far from streetwise. When Rell’s beloved kitten, Keanu, is catnapped, the hopelessly straight-laced pair must impersonate ruthless killers in order to infiltrate a street gang and retrieve the purloined feline. But the incredibly adorable kitten becomes so coveted that the fight over his custody creates a gang war, forcing our two unwitting heroes to take the law into their own hands.
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Ice Age: Collision Course

Scrat's epic pursuit of the elusive acorn catapults him into the universe where he accidentally sets off a series of cosmic events that transform and threaten the Ice Age world. To save themselves, Sid, Manny, Diego, and the rest of the herd must leave their home and embark on a quest full of comedy and adventure, traveling to exotic new lands and encountering a host of colorful new characters.
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  • Published in Auto

2017 Bugatti Chiron: The $2.6-Million, 1500-hp, 261-mph Image Booster

With the Bugatti Veyron’s top-speed records, a price tag over $1 million, and distinctive melted-scoop-of-ice-cream styling, it was an instant rolling superlative when it debuted in 2005. Its successor, the new Chiron, is even more of a record- and headline-grabbing show pony. Is it faster? A 310-mph (500 km/h) speedometer and Bugatti’s claim that it’ll do 261 mph say it is.

Never mind that there are few places in the world where anyone could achieve 261 mph, and even fewer owners who will ever attempt the feat, what could hypercars such as the Ferrari LaFerrari, Porsche 918 Spyder, or McLaren P1 offer in retort? That their top speeds are lower, they’re less comfortable, or, critically, that they’re—gulp—cheaper? The Chiron’s game is to be so unattainable, so unimaginable, so magical as to reestablish Bugatti as the ultimate automotive accouterment for those who measure their cash reserves not by face value but with a yardstick.

Make Bugatti Great Again

Bugatti says the 4400-pound Chiron is “the world’s first production sports car with 1500 hp.” It’s best to simply shelve any expectations of modesty on Bugatti’s part. After all, when the car you’re replacing produced 1200 horsepower, hit 258 mph, and cost more than $2 million, adding an extra 300 horsepower, 3 mph of governed top speed, and half a million to the window sticker matters. Oh, and just 500 will be made, because nobody wants a mass-produced $2.6-million car.

Between Bugatti’s braggadocio and posturing, there are real improvements to the Veyron’s formula. Does it matter that, if every strand of carbon fiber in its new central tub were laid end to end, they’d “stretch nine times the distance between the earth and the moon”? No, and we pity the Bugatti employee charged with checking the arithmetic on that factoid. But it is indicative of a real effort to reduce—or at least hold the line on—the Chiron’s weight relative to that of the somewhat pudgy Veyron. All of that carbon fiber—the body panels also are made of the stuff—helps keep the Chiron right around the same weight as the 4486-pound Veyron, despite being 3.2 inches longer, 1.6 inches wider, and 0.3 inch taller. Bugatti further claims that the Chiron’s structure is as stiff as those underpinning LMP1 racing prototypes.

At the risk of sounding beguiled, the styling of the Chiron is notably more fetching than that of the Veyron. The C-shaped curve carved into each side of the body recalls Bugatti’s 1930s-era art-deco masterpieces, the Type 57 Atlantic and Atalante, as does the spear running down the car’s spine. The all-mesh tail appears to belong to a different car, but the surfaces bending and flowing beyond it are nearly beautiful. Up front, Bugatti’s horseshoe-shaped grille remains—stamped with a badge rendered from five ounces of silver—and is flanked by quad-LED headlights. Moving aerodynamic elements range from a hydraulically operated diffuser, front splitters, and a four-position rear spoiler/wing that can sit flush with the rear bodywork, extend slightly (the setting for top-speed runs), fully extend, or fully extend and tilt in its air-brake setting. The underbody is totally smooth save for NACA ducts that gulp air for cooling the engine, the transaxle, and the rear brakes.

What’s an Extra 3 mph?

When chasing top-speed honors, horsepower matters. Even so, there are diminishing returns in the fight against the atmosphere at higher speeds. The Chiron’s redesigned 8.0-liter quad-turbocharged W-16 engine produces 1500 horsepower, 300 more than the outgoing Veyron Super Sport—and yet it tacks only another 3 mph onto that car’s top speed, and only eight more atop the 1001-hp Veyron 16.4’s 253-mph max. Bugatti has tuned the Chiron’s four turbochargers to work sequentially, with two operating at low engine speeds for better response before the other two take over above roughly 3800 rpm for maximum power. Down the line, there no doubt will be additional variations on the Chiron theme that add precious miles per hour to the top speed.

Exhaust is routed from the turbos to a new titanium exhaust that Bugatti claims weighs 44 pounds, which is “extremely light compared with similar [16-cylinder] units.” Perhaps the automaker is referring to the chrome stacks on semi trucks, because it also proudly describes two of the catalytic converters as being “six times as large as [those] fitted to a medium-sized car” and boasts that the total exhaust-scrubbing area of all six catalytic converters is greater than that of 30 soccer fields. This should give you some idea of the level of emissions produced by an 8.0-liter 16-cylinder engine.

As in the Veyron, torque is routed to all four wheels via a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission. Bugatti claims the clutches are the “largest, highest-performing” such components ever fitted to a car. They’d better be if they’re going to stand up to the 8.0-liter’s 1180 lb-ft of torque during sub-2.5-second rips to 62 mph. Also like the Veyron, the Chiron is a rolling heat-exchanger farm, with more than 13 gallons of coolant circulating through two separate cooling loops. The first loop holds 3.2 gallons of liquid and cools the turbochargers’ intercoolers; the larger loop services the engine and pumps 9.8 gallons of coolant through its veins into three radiators. There also are heat exchangers for the engine, transmission, rear-differential, and hydraulic oils, as well as those needed for cabin heat and air conditioning.

Bugatti has expanded the number of drive modes to five. There is a standard “EB” automatic mode, as well as Lift (for speed bumps and driveway entrances), Autobahn, Handling, and Top Speed. Moving among the settings alters the dampers, the ride-height actuators, the electrically assisted power-steering calibration, the electronically controlled rear differential, the active aerodynamics, and the stability control. The driver can select Lift, EB, Autobahn, and Handling modes using a dial on the steering wheel, but, as on the Veyron, Top Speed requires a separate “Speed Key” and unlocks the Chiron’s Vmax potential. The other drive modes limit top speed to 236 mph (Lift mode cancels out at 31 mph), still more than enough to get valet attendants in trouble. Anything past 112 mph automatically activates Autobahn mode, while in the Handling setting, the Chiron lowers itself, raises its rear wing to its highest position, and stiffens the dampers.

Bugatti claims the Chiron can pull 1.50 g’s in lateral acceleration; this probably has more to do with the car’s massive 20-inch 285/30 front and 21-inch 355/25 rear bespoke Michelin tires than outstanding chassis tuning or light weight. Those tires, by the way, also are said to boast a larger contact patch than the Veyron’s and will apparently be “easier to install and allow lower operating expenses.” Considering how the Veyron Super Sport’s tires cost $42,000 per set and required the replacement of all four wheels after three tire swaps ($69K), the change is welcome. Because the rear air brake alone won’t quickly shave big speed, the Chiron uses carbon-ceramic brake rotors that are all 0.8-inch larger in diameter and 0.1-inch thicker; the front rotors are 16.5 inches across and the rears are 15.7. The front brake calipers employ eight pistons, while the rears have six.

Inside Thoughts

The Chiron’s interior has been completely redesigned and seems to have been given nearly as much thought as figuring out how to make a 4400-pound chunk of carbon fiber and metal hurtle through the atmosphere at more than 200 mph. The aesthetic is spare yet clearly upscale. A glowing rib echoing the external “spine” sweeps down the middle of the cabin and is said to be “the longest light conductor used in the automobile industry.” A waterfall of simple aluminum dials for the climate system pours down a gleaming aluminum strip supported by carbon-fiber ribbing, while infotainment and navigation duties are handled by a pair of screens flanking the analog speedometer. The entire gauge pod, in fact, is an incredible piece of sculpture that is milled from billet aluminum.

Whatever isn’t slathered in leather or hewn from aluminum is covered in carbon fiber. The audio system is provided by Accuton, and it can be tuned to account for any of the 31 different leather choices and eight microsuede options for the interior. (Have you ever heard the reverb produced by soft Corinthian leather? Ask Ricardo Montalban.) And whether or not Bugatti is lobbing a pun when it says that the one-carat diamond membrane in each of the four tweeters deliver “crystal-clear sound,” we’re pretty sure the point is that there are diamonds in the speakers. For Chiron customers with Louis Vuitton–brand tinfoil hats, Bugatti says the car has “an extremely high level of electromagnetic compatibility” borne out by tests of an unspecified military standard.

Awestruck yet? There’s little doubt that the Chiron trumps even the mighty Veyron in the jaw-slackening department. The Chiron is undoubtedly an engineering triumph and the pinnacle of immoderation; the masses should be properly enthralled. Most critically, so should those with the considerable means to purchase one.

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New ‘Top Gear’ Host Matt LeBlanc Criticized for Driving Donuts, Smoking Tires Beside Revered British War Memorial

Matt LeBlanc has always been able to rely on lots of good Friends – and this now extends to the co-hosts of hit BBC motoring show Top Gear.

Fresh from crashing a wedding at St Paul’s cathedral in a suped-up Ford Mustang, L Blanc has now received severe criticism for performing “donuts” near the Cenotaph war memorial in London – the most revered sight of remembrance in the United Kingdom.

Col. Richard Kemp, the former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, told The Daily Telegraph that it was “a disgrace” that a car stunt should take place so close to the memorial.

While the BBC claims the stunt “took place around 40 metres away from the Cenotaph,” paparazzi photographs appear to show the war memorial being covered in smoke from the burning rubber of the Mustang’s tires. Heavy tire marks were also left outside the Houses of Parliament.

Luckily, for LeBlanc, however, co-host Chris Evans stepped in to shoulder the blame Monday morning.

“On behalf of the Top Gear team and Matt, I would like to apologize unreservedly for what these images seem to portray,” Evans said on his BBC radio breakfast show.

“There have been some very incendiary comments written alongside these pictures and I completely understand this furor but the Top Gear team would never ever do that,” he said. “Retrospectively it was unwise to be anywhere near the Cenotaph with this motorcar.”

Evans later described the decision to film near the Cenotaph as “unwise” before adding, “It doesn’t matter what actually happened, it doesn’t matter what the circumstances were that could explain this away. What is important about this is what these images look like and they look entirely disrespectful, which is not – and would never be – the intention of the Top Gear team or Matt.”

Evans later told reporters outside the BBC radio studios in London that the footage should “be pulled” – an idea that was first suggested by Kemp.

“It is gravely disrespectful,” Kemp told The Telegraph, before likening the Cenotaph – which is the annual site of remembrance for Queen Elizabeth II and the royal family, to a cemetery.

“It beggars belief that they were ever allowed to film here,” he added.

“People like Matt LeBlanc and other stars of Top Gear could never give to this country, or their own country, what those who have died fighting for it have given and I think a degree of respect is due to them,” he continued. “This is a sacred tribute to millions of people.”

This is not the first time that Top Gear has got into trouble for it’s gasoline-fuelled antics. In March 2015, previous host Jeremy Clarkson was sacked for launching an allegedly “unprovoked physical and verbal attack” on producer Oisin Tymon.

Co-presenters Richard Hammond and James May quit Top Gear soon after, prompting the BBC to hire LeBlanc, Evans and five other presenters to re-launch the show, which is scheduled to air in May.

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Ciara and Russell Wilson Are Engaged

Currently on vacation, Ciara and Russell Wilson have just gotten engaged. Finally, there’s a light at the end of the tunnel.

Wilson, a quarterback for the Seattle Seahawks, tweeted a video of the couple celebrating writing, “Since day one I knew you were the one.”

The video’s pretty dark, but it doesn’t require a whole lot of light to see the massive ring Ciara is sporting on her finger.

“Yay I’m so excited,” she says in the video. “God is so good.”

Wilson and Ciara have been dating for about a year now. This will be the second marriage for Wilson and the first for Ciara, who was previously engaged to Future, the father of her son.

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Oscar Winners List

Here are the winners in the major categories at the 88th Academy Awards, held Sunday night at the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood:

Best Picture
Spotlight

Best Director
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, The Revenant

Best Actor
Leonardo DiCaprio, The Revenant

Best Actress
Brie Larson, Room

Best Supporting Actor
Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies

Best Supporting Actress
Alicia Vikander, The Danish Girl

Best Original Song
"Writing's on the Wall," SPECTRE

Writing (Adapted Screenplay)
The Big Short

Writing (Original Screenplay)
Spotlight

Best Foreign Language Film
Son of Saul

Best Animated Feature Film
Inside Out

Best Animated Short Film
Bear Story

Best Live Action Short Film
Stutterer

Best Visual Effects
Ex Machina

Best Editing
Mad Max: Fury Road

Best Production Design
Mad Max: Fury Road

Best Original Score
The Hateful Eight

Best Documentary Short Subject
A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness

Best Documentary Feature
Amy

Best Sound Editing
Mad Max: Fury Road

Best Sound Mixing
Mad Max: Fury Road

Best Cinematography
The Revenant

Best Costume Design
Mad Max: Fury Road

Best Makeup and Hairstyling
Mad Max: Fury Road
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Lifeline RX, Week 1, March 2016

The theme for the 2016 World Kidney Day campaign recognized on the 10th of March is “Kidney Disease and Children: Act Early to Prevent It!” Kidney diseases affect millions of people worldwide, including many children who may be at risk of kidney disease at an early age.

The kidneys are two organs located in your midsection on either side of your spine in the middle of your back, just above the waist. They clean your blood, keep the balance of salt and minerals in your blood, and help control blood pressure.

When your kidneys are damaged, waste products and fluid can build up in your body, causing swelling in your ankles, vomiting, weakness, poor sleep, and shortness of breath. If you don't treat them, diseased kidneys may eventually stop working completely. Loss of kidney function is a serious -- and potentially fatal -- condition.

Doctors call the sudden loss of kidney function "acute kidney injury" or "acute renal failure" (ARF). It has three main causes:

  • Lack of blood flow to the kidneys;
  • Direct damage to the kidneys themselves; or
  • Urine backed up in the kidneys.

These can happen when you:

  • Have a traumatic injury with blood loss;
  • Are dehydrated;
  • Go into shock during a severe infection called sepsis;
  • Have a blocked urine flow, which can happen with an enlarged prostate;
  • Take specific drugs or are around certain toxins; or
  • Get certain complications with a pregnancy;

Kidneys that don't work well for longer than 3 months is called chronic kidney disease. It's dangerous, because you may not have any symptoms until a lot of damage that often can't be repaired, has happened.

Many people who have chronic kidney disease don't know it because the early signs can be very subtle. It can take many years to go from chronic kidney disease to kidney failure. Most people with chronic kidney disease live out their lives without ever reaching kidney failure. People with stage 3 chronic kidney disease have about an 80% chance of never having their kidneys fail.

At any stage of kidney disease, knowledge is power. Knowing the symptoms of kidney disease can help you get the treatment you need to feel your best.

Symptom 1: Changes in Urination

Kidneys make urine, so when the kidneys are failing, the urine may change.

  • You may have to get up at night to urinate.
  • Urine may be foamy or bubbly.
  • You may urinate more often, or in greater amounts than usual, with pale urine.
  • You may urinate less often, or in smaller amounts than usual, with dark- colored urine.
  • Your urine may contain blood.
  • You may feel pressure or have difficulty urinating.

    Symptom 2: Swelling

    Failing kidneys don't remove extra fluid, which builds up in your body causing swelling in the legs, ankles, feet, face, and/or hands.

    Symptom 3: Fatigue

    Healthy kidneys make a hormone called erythropoietin (a-rith'-ro-po'-uh-tin), or EPO, that tells your body to make oxygen-carrying red blood cells. As the kidneys fail, they make less EPO. With fewer red blood cells to carry oxygen, your muscles and brain tire very quickly. This is anemia, and it can be treated.

    Symptom 4: Skin Rash/Itching

    Kidneys remove wastes from the bloodstream. When the kidneys fail, the build- up of wastes in your blood can cause severe itching.

    Symptom 5: Metallic Taste in Mouth/Ammonia Breath

    A build-up of wastes in the blood (called uremia) can make food taste different and cause bad breath. You may also notice that you stop liking to eat meat, or that you are losing weight because you just don't feel like eating.

    Symptom 6: Nausea and Vomiting

    A severe build-up of wastes in the blood (uremia) can also cause nausea and vomiting. Loss of appetite can lead to weight loss.

    Symptom 7: Shortness of Breath

    Trouble catching your breath can be related to the kidneys in two ways. First, extra fluid in the body can build up in the lungs. And second, anemia (a shortage of oxygen-carrying red blood cells) can leave your body oxygen-starved and short of breath.

    Symptom 8: Feeling Cold

    Anemia can make you feel cold all the time, even in a warm room.

    Symptom 9: Dizziness and Trouble Concentrating

    Anemia related to kidney failure means that your brain is not getting enough oxygen. This can lead to memory problems, trouble with concentration, and dizziness.

    Symptom 10: Leg/Flank Pain

    The most common causes of chronic kidney disease do not cause any pain. And, much of the pain that is near the kidneys is not caused by a kidney problem. But some people who have chronic kidney disease do have pain. Some people with kidney problems may have pain in the upper back (where the kidneys are) or on the same side as the affected kidney.

    If you or someone you know has one or more of the aforementioned symptoms of chronic kidney disease, or you worry about kidney problems in yourself, spouse or children, see a doctor for blood and urine tests. Remember, many of the symptoms can be caused by other health problems. The only way to know the cause of your symptoms is to see your doctor.

    For additional information regarding kidney disease, contact the Health Promotion Unit at 338-3064.

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    Lifeline RX, Week 5, February 2016

    “We can. I can.” – combat cancer through early detection.

    Several screening tests have been shown to detect cancer early and reduce the chance of dying from that cancer.

    Diagnosing cancer isn’t always easy. Cancer can cause many symptoms. Only a doctor can tell if your symptoms are caused by cancer or some other problem. People with symptoms that do not go away should see a doctor.

    Although, not all cancers show early signs and symptoms, for a number of cancers, increasing awareness of signs and symptoms and the importance of timely treatment has been shown to improve survival from cancer. This is because finding cancer early almost always makes it easier to treat or even cure.

    Recent figures from the United Kingdom for example, have found that for eight common cancers - bladder, bowel, breast, cervical, womb, malignant melanoma, ovarian and testicular cancers - survival is three times higher when cancer is diagnosed early.

    Health professionals play a critical role in early diagnosis. Being equipped with the knowledge and skills to recognise the early warning signs of some cancers, knowing when symptoms need to be investigated and referring patients promptly for tests, can contribute to increasing the proportion of cancers that are found early.

    Checking for cancer (or for conditions that may become cancer) in people who have no symptoms is called screening. Screening can help doctors find and treat several types of cancer early. Early detection is important because when abnormal tissue or cancer is found early, it may be easier to treat. By the time symptoms appear, cancer may have begun to spread and is harder to treat.

    For instance, clinical breast examination can be performed by trained healthcare professionals and has the potential to detect cancers earlier.

    Individuals can also be encouraged to know what’s normal for their body and to recognise any unusual or persistent changes. For example, a person can become familiar with the look of their skin so they can be aware of any changes that might suggest a skin cancer, such as recognising a spot that is growing and changing in shape or size.

    Visual screening for oral cancer is also effective in reducing deaths from this type of cancer in users of tobacco and/or alcohol.

    It is important to keep in mind that cancer screening tests can have potential harms as well as benefits. For example, screening tests can have false-positive results indicating that cancer may be present even though it is not or false-negative results indicating that cancer is not present even though it is. It can be helpful for people to discuss the potential harms as well as benefits of different cancer screening tests with their doctors.

    Many cancers can be successfully treated and even cured with awareness of early warning signs and symptoms, proper cancer screening, and early diagnosis.

    For additional information regarding the early detection of cancer, contact the Health Promotion Unit at 338-3064.

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    Lifeline RX, Week 4, February 2016

    Influenza (also called flu) is a contagious respiratory illness caused by influenza viruses that infect the nose, throat, and lungs. In this region, the flu usually spreads between the months of October and May during flu season.

    Flu can cause mild to severe illness, and at times can lead to death. People who have the flu often feel some or all of these signs and symptoms:

    • Fever or feeling feverish/chills
    • Cough
    • Sore throat
    • Runny or stuffy nose
    • Muscle or body aches
    • Headaches
    • Fatigue (very tired)
    • Some people may have vomiting and diarrhea, though this is more common in children than adults.
    *It’s important to note that not everyone with flu will have a fever.

    Flu viruses spread mainly by droplets made when people with flu cough, sneeze or talk. These droplets can land in the mouths or noses of people who are nearby. Less often, a person might also get the flu by touching a surface or object that has flu virus on it and then touching their own mouth, eyes or possibly their nose.

    Persons may spread the flu to someone else before they know they are sick, as well as while they are sick. Most healthy adults may be able to infect others beginning 1 day before symptoms develop up to 5 to 7 days after becoming sick.

    Some people, especially young children and people with weakened immune systems, might be able to infect others for an even longer time.

    Flu is unpredictable and can become severe. Certain people are at greater risk for serious complications if they get the flu. This includes older people, young children, pregnant women and people with certain health conditions (such as asthma, diabetes, or heart disease). Complications of the flu can include bacterial pneumonia, ear infections, sinus infections, dehydration, and worsening of chronic medical conditions, such as congestive heart failure, asthma, or diabetes.

    The single best way to prevent the flu is to get a flu vaccine every season.

    Everyone 6 months of age and older should get a flu vaccine soon after flu vaccines are available, and ideally by October. However, getting vaccinated even later can be protective, as long as flu viruses are circulating. Since it takes about two weeks after vaccination for antibodies to develop in the body that protect against influenza virus infection, it is best that people get vaccinated so they are protected before influenza begins spreading in their community.

    Some people should not get vaccinated. Factors that can determine a person's suitability for vaccination, include a person's age, health (current and past) and any relevant allergies, including egg allergies. Please consult your doctor or the Primary Health Care Department about flu vaccination.

    Take everyday preventive actions to stop the spread of flu germs.

    • Try to avoid close contact with sick people;
    • Cover your nose and mouth with a tissue when you cough or sneeze. Throw the tissue in the trash after you use it;
    • Wash your hands often with soap and water, and if soap and water are not available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer, especially before eating and after coughing, sneezing or blowing your nose;
    • Avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth. Germs spread this way; and
    • Clean and disinfect surfaces and objects that may be contaminated with germs like the flu;
    • If sick, limit contact with others as much as possible to keep from infecting them. The Ministry of Health recommends that you stay home for at least 24 hours after your fever is gone except to get medical care or for other necessities. Your fever should be gone for 24 hours without the use of a fever-reducing medicine.

    For additional information regarding influenza, contact a public primary health care clinic on your island.

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    Lifeline RX Week 3, February 2016

    The bite of an infected Aedes aegypti mosquito can spread dengue, chikungunya, or Zika viruses.

    While chikungunya virus is relatively new to the Turks and Caicos Islands, dengue has been present in country for nearly five years. Now Zika virus, which has been reported in over 20 countries and territories in Latin America and the Caribbean, has become an eminent threat.

    The most common symptoms of Zika virus infection are mild fever, skin rash, pink eye, muscle or joint pain, and general malaise. The illness is usually mild with symptoms lasting for several days to a week. There is no specific treatment or vaccine for Zika.

    Although symptoms of Zika are typically mild, there have been reports of congenital, neurological and autoimmune complications. For reasons that are not fully understood, a relationship has been established between pregnant women infected with Zika and cases of the birth defect microcephaly, which causes abnormally small heads and underdeveloped brains. There has also been some evidence of vertical transmission of the Zika virus from mother to child. Some countries with Zika have reported an increase in neurological and autoimmune syndromes, particularly Gullian-Barré syndrome (an autoimmune disease where the immune system attacks the nerves).

    The best way to combat these diseases is to protect yourself, your family, and community from mosquito bites.

    Female Aedes aegypti mosquitoes lay several hundred eggs on the walls of water filled containers. Eggs stick to containers like glue and remain attached until they are scrubbed off. When water covers the eggs, they hatch and become adults in about a week. Adult mosquitoes live inside and outside. They prefer to bite during the day. A few infected mosquitoes can produce large outbreaks in a community and put your family at risk of becoming sick.

    1. Eliminate standing water in and around your home:
    • Once a week, empty and scrub, turn over, cover, or throw out items that hold water, such as tires, buckets, planters, or trash containers.
    Check inside and outside your home;
    • Tightly cover boats, children’s pools, and water storage containers like buckets, tanks, and drums so that mosquitoes cannot get inside to lay eggs;
    • Clean rain gutters and make sure they are flowing properly; and properly dispose of all garbage or refuse
    2. Keep mosquitoes out of your home:
    • Use screens on windows and doors;
    • Repair holes in screens; and use air conditioning when available.
    • If you are not able to protect yourself from mosquitoes inside your home or hotel room, sleep under a mosquito net
    3. Prevent mosquito bites:
    • Wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants;
    • Use mosquito repellent with higher percentages of active ingredient for longer protection. Products containing DEET like Off and Cutter are recommended.
      • Always follow the product label instructions;
      • Reapply insect repellent every few hours, depending on which product and strength you choose;
      • Do not spray repellent on the skin under clothing;
      • If you are also using sunscreen, apply sunscreen first and insect repellent second.

    For additional information regarding Zika virus, contact the Health Promotion Unit at 338-3064.

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