The show must go on:
The World Health Organization is trying to ease concerns about spreading Zika as a result of this summer's Olympics in Rio de Janiero.
"Based on current assessment, cancelling or changing the location of the 2016 Olympics will not significantly alter the international spread of Zika virus," a statement released Saturday reads.
This comes a day after more than 150 scientists released an open letter to the head of WHO calling for the games to be moved or postponed, citing new research. "We make this call despite the widespread fatalism that the Rio 2016 Games are inevitable or 'too big to fail,'" the letter says.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 30 2016, @07:05PM
It seems worse than that though. The definition of this disease seems fatally flawed. It is a head circumference 2 sd below the average for that age and sex, so it automatically includes ~2.5% of the population in the absence of any disease. This assumes the circumference is normally distributed, but if it isn't close to that then using 2 sd is even more nonsensical. Even worse, you can have this disease at one age and then not have it later:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/uog.7556/full [wiley.com]
None if this is anything close to what I was imagining "microcephaly" meant (which seems to be micrencephaly). Even if Zika causes microcephaly, it could be a irrelevant due to the insanely bad definition. It may be like discovering that Zika is correlated to having long toes or something like that.