Health

Zika virus: Canadian women advised to wait 2 months to get pregnant after travel

The Public Health Agency of Canada is advising women who want to get pregnant to wait at least two months after visiting countries where the Zika virus is circulating — or could begin circulating — before trying to conceive.

Women wishing to get pregnant should wait at least 2 months after return from areas of Zika virus circulation

An Aedes aegypti mosquito is photographed through a microscope at the Fiocruz institute in Recife, Pernambuco state, Brazil.
Cases of Zika virus have reached epidemic levels in Brazil, most of South America, throughout Central America, parts of Mexico, and much of the Caribbean. (Felipe Dana/Associated Press)

The Public Health Agency of Canada is advising women who want to get pregnant to wait at least two months after visiting countries where the Zika virus is circulating — or could begin circulating — before trying to conceive.

The mosquito-borne virus has been potentially linked in Brazil to thousands of cases of newborns with abnormally small heads. It's believed mothers may have been infected during pregnancy.

Cases of Zika have reached epidemic levels in that country, most of South America, throughout Central America, parts of Mexico, and much of the Caribbean.

A number Canadians and Americans who travelled to the endemic areas have been diagnosed with Zika after returning home. And in a small number of cases, infected males have sexually transmitted the virus to their female partners.

The Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada offers similar advice to women contemplating travel to areas where Zika is commonly present or endemic. "Women wishing to become pregnant should wait two to three months after their return from an affected area before trying to conceive," the society says.

"It's because we do not know how long the virus can remain in the blood," Dr. Jennifer Blake, the society's CEO, said in an email. 

The Public Health Agency of Canada says that until more is known, men who have a pregnant partner should consider using condoms for the duration of the pregnancy.

"It is recommended that pregnant women and those considering becoming pregnant discuss their travel plans with their health-care provider to assess their risk and consider postponing travel to areas where the Zika virus is circulating and countries in tropical and subtropical regions where the virus has the potential to circulate," the agency says on its website.

The agency updated its advice with the recommendation to wait two months on Feb. 19 and tweeted an infographic about it today, a spokesman said. 

If travel cannot be postponed, the agency says strict mosquito-bite prevention measures should be followed, including wearing clothes to cover exposed skin and using a repellent such as DEET.

With files from CBC News