ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- Florida's governor says that state has confirmed five new non-travel-related cases of Zika, including one in the Tampa Bay area, though officials aren't so far declaring that a zone of active local transmission.
Gov. Rick Scott said at a Zika roundtable in the Tampa area's Pinellas County that four new cases were connected to mosquitoes in Miami's Wynwood arts district. He says the fifth was diagnosed in a Pinellas County resident who hasn't traveled internationally. Last week health officials announced five cases of Zika were linked to mosquitoes in Miami Beach.
Officials are looking into the possibility that the Pinellas County resident was infected with the virus in a neighboring county.
Zika can cause severe brain-related birth defects, including a dangerously small head, if women are infected during pregnancy.