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Sunday, July 31, 2022
New York City declares monkeypox a public health emergency - ABC News
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August 01, 2022 at 08:52AM
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New York City declares monkeypox a public health emergency - ABC News
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Monkeypox Outbreak: How it spreads, who is at risk? | Latest English News | WION - WION
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July 31, 2022 at 12:57PM
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Monkeypox Outbreak: How it spreads, who is at risk? | Latest English News | WION - WION
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New York governor: Monkeypox is a 'disaster emergency' - Fox News
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New York Gov. Kathy Hochul issued an executive order on Friday declaring a State Disaster Emergency in response to the monkeypox outbreak.
New York is the epicenter of the outbreak in the U.S., and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that there are currently 1,345 confirmed monkeypox and orthopoxvirus cases in the Empire State.
"After reviewing the latest data on the monkeypox outbreak in New York State, I am declaring a State Disaster Emergency to strengthen our aggressive ongoing efforts to confront this outbreak," the leader wrote in a statement.
"More than one in four monkeypox cases in this country are in New York State, and we need to utilize every tool in our arsenal as we respond. It's especially important to recognize the ways in which this outbreak is currently having a disproportionate impact on certain at-risk groups. That's why my team and I are working around the clock to secure more vaccines, expand testing capacity and responsibly educate the public on how to stay safe during this outbreak," she said.
NEW YORK, SAN FRANCISCO: MONKEYPOX THREAT TO PUBLIC HEALTH
Hochul said on Twitter that the order will enable the state's government to "respond more swiftly" and aid the state's vaccination efforts.
Specifically, the order extends the pool of eligible individuals who are able to give the vaccine shots, including EMS personnel, pharmacists and midwives.
It also allows physicians and certified nurse practitioners to issue non-patient-specific standing orders for vaccines and requires providers to send vaccine data to the New York State Department of Health.
On Thursday, the Empire State's health commissioner declared monkeypox an "imminent threat to public health."
SPAIN CONFIRMS FIRST MONKEYPOX-RELATED DEATH IN EUROPE
"Based on the ongoing spread of this virus, which has increased rapidly and affected primarily communities that identify as men who have sex with men, and the need for local jurisdictions to administer vaccines, I've declared monkeypox an Imminent Threat to Public Health throughout New York State," State Commissioner of Health Dr. Mary T. Bassett said in a statement. "This declaration means that local health departments engaged in response and prevention activities will be able to access additional State reimbursement, after other Federal and State funding sources are maximized, to protect all New Yorkers and ultimately limit the spread of monkeypox in our communities."
Hochul announced then that 110,00 monkeypox vaccine doses were secured for the state, which would be delivered over the course of the next four to six weeks.
Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, announced Thursday that an additional 786,000 doses of the vaccine would be deployed nationwide.
"Our goal is to stay ahead of this virus and end this outbreak. We have a strategy to deploy these additional vaccine doses in a way that protects those at risk and limits the spread of the virus, while also working with states to ensure equitable and fair distribution," he said. "These vaccines are the result of years of federal investment and planning."
On a call, Becerra told reporters the same day that the Biden administration believes it has "done everything we can at the federal level to work with… state and local partners and communities affected to make sure we can stay ahead of this and end this outbreak."
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The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Julia Musto is a reporter for Fox News Digital. You can find her on Twitter at @JuliaElenaMusto.
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July 31, 2022 at 01:12AM
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New York governor: Monkeypox is a 'disaster emergency' - Fox News
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Saturday, July 30, 2022
The Price Of Pride - The American Conservative
Well, gosh, the governor of New York has declared a public health emergency around monkeypox. Excerpt:
Gov. Kathy Hochul declared a state of emergency as cases of monkeypox continued to increase rapidly in New York.
The outbreak has been concentrated in New York City and reached close to 1,400 cases across the state on Friday, according to the governor’s disaster declaration.
The executive order authorizes state agencies to help localities respond to the outbreak. According to state officials, it extends the pool of people who are eligible to administer vaccines, adding emergency responders, pharmacists and midwives. The order also makes it easier for physicians and nurse practitioners to give people shots. And it requires providers to send vaccine data to the New York State Department of Health.
The governor said on Twitter that it would allow the state “to respond more swiftly” to the outbreak.
Does that mean the state is planning on shutting down sites where gay men -- 98 percent of monkeypox victims so far -- gather for sex, given that it has been mostly a sexually transmitted disease? What are you, a bigot?
Scott Gottlieb, former FDA commissioner, writes in the NYT that monkeypox is about to become another huge public health failure. His reasons for that grim conclusion are sound, but not once does he mention that the authorities could easily and effectively respond in part by shutting down gay sex clubs. Gay men cannot fail; they can only be failed by public agencies.
In one month, the annual Southern Decadence festival will be held in New Orleans. From the New Orleans daily paper:
Even as Louisiana receives thousands of doses of the monkeypox vaccines, officials say it’s likely not enough to ward off further spread of infection with the approach of the Southern Decadence Festival, the annual LGBTQ celebration that typically draws 250,000 people to the French Quarter over Labor Day weekend.
The state was allotted an additional 7,200 vaccines on Friday in addition to over 2,000 already shipped by the government. That’s enough to vaccinate about 4,600 people, considering every person requires two shots. But it leaves many still in need, especially ahead of a festival that packs the streets, bars and clubs.
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards ought to ban this festival this year on public health grounds. Gov. Edwards oversaw a Covid response that shut down all kinds of public events out of fear of Covid spread -- including Southern Decadence, in both 2020 and 2021. It was a huge economic hit to New Orleans, but public health came first, right? Why wouldn't the Democratic governor shut down this gay male mega-festival, given how hideous monkeypox is, and how fast it is spreading? Other than fear of being called a bigot, I mean?
The friend in Baton Rouge who sent me that story comments:
So they can shut down Mardi Gras for a couple of years, but not the Decadence festival? What happens if it does start to spread outside of the gay community? What if somehow it spreads into BR and my kids get it? Is this a public health emergency or not?
We are seeing what it means to have gay male privilege. If you have followed all the messaging of the past ten to twenty years in the mainstream media and from American institutions, you know that LGBTs are not like the rest of us. As superior people, they have a right not to have to follow the rules. Again: they cannot fail, they can only be failed.
Take this NYT story about a male-to-female transgender murderer who declared he was a woman at some point after doing prison time for killing two women, and who is now on trial for killing another woman after his release. This freak has a lifetime of violence towards women behind him, according to state records. Excerpts:
The person before the parole panel in June 2019 was tall and slim, in far better shape than 81 years of life might have suggested. Mild and polite, the supplicant seemed nothing like the murderer who had spent decades in prison, first for shooting a girlfriend dead in 1963, and then for stabbing another in 1985, stuffing her corpse into a bag and leaving it in Central Park.
“I’m no longer that person,” the inmate told the parole board commissioners. Despite misgivings, they would rule in favor of release.
Two and a half years after leaving Cayuga Correctional Facility, Marceline Harvey was accused again, charged with killing Susan Leyden, 68. Parts of Ms. Leyden’s body were found in March inside a shopping cart in East New York, stuffed in a bag. In Ms. Harvey’s apartment, investigators found a bloody mop, a tub full of towels and a box for an electric saw.
Here's the money part:
A homeless shelter worker and people close to Ms. Leyden questioned whether, despite her gender identity, Ms. Harvey should have been placed in a homeless shelter for women, given her history of attacking and murdering them. Speaking from Rikers to The New York Post, Ms. Harvey referred to herself as having two personas: one, a violent male named Harvey Marcelin — the name she used for most of her life and is included in court records — and the other, a soft-spoken woman named Marceline Harvey.
But transgender people are far more likely to become victims of violence, not perpetrators, and data from the National Center for Transgender Equality suggests more than half of transgender people who stay in shelters encounter harassment.
See? Even when transgenders fail, they are far more likely to be failed. A story cannot just stand on its own; media outlets like the Times have to police the public for wrongthink.
If monkeypox becomes a permanent disease in American life -- and especially if it passes over into the general population -- because too many gay men couldn't keep their pants up, and public health authorities were too cowardly to shut down gay sex festivals and gay sex clubs, the price of Pride is going to be a hell of a thing to pay.
I swear, if you could get monkeypox by going to church, Biden and Fauci would be right now sending in the National Guard to weld the doors of houses of worship shut like the Chinese did with Wuhan apartments in Covid.
UPDATE: Going to the fetish festival in San Francisco on Sunday? Heaven forbid they shut it down with a horrific epidemic raging among men who have sex with men. Here's some advice from the San Francisco AIDS Foundation on how to navigate the festival. Excerpts:
"Douchie" is the cartoon helper named after the plastic bulb that gay men use to clean out their rectums before anal sex. Cute!
Douchie does NOT recommend staying home and chaste to avoid catching or spreading monkeypox. No sir! Here's the first thing Douchie recommends:
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What is a "piggy party"? Well, a "pig," in gay parlance, is someone who is hyper-focused on having sex, especially kinky sex.
I'm reminded of this honest tweet by the conservative gay writer Chad Felix Greene:
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July 31, 2022 at 05:05AM
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The Price Of Pride - The American Conservative
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Friday, July 29, 2022
Monkeypox: First deaths outside Africa in Brazil and Spain - BBC
Brazil and Spain have reported their first monkeypox deaths.
A 41-year-old man in Brazil became the first fatality from the virus outside Africa. Spain announced its first death soon afterwards, which is also the first in Europe.
Last week, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the monkeypox outbreak a global health emergency.
But infections are usually mild and the risk to the general population is low.
According to Brazil's health ministry, the victim there suffered from lymphoma and a weakened immune system, and "comorbidities aggravated his condition".
Brazil has so far reported 1,066 confirmed cases and 513 suspected cases of the virus. Data from Brazil's health ministry indicates that more than 98% of confirmed cases were in men who have sex with men.
Shortly afterwards, Spain's health ministry confirmed Europe's first death from the virus.
In a report, it said that of 3,750 monkeypox patients with available information, 120 or 3.2% had been hospitalised and one had died. It did not give any further information about the victim.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there are 21,148 cases worldwide.
The monkeypox virus is a member of the same family of viruses as smallpox, although it is much less severe and experts say chances of infection are low.
It occurs mostly in remote parts of central and west African countries, near tropical rainforests.
Health officials are recommending people at highest risk of exposure to the virus - including some gay and bisexual men, as well as some healthcare workers - should be offered a vaccine.
Last week, WHO director general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said declaring the outbreak a global health emergency would help speed up the development of vaccines and the implementation of measures to limit the spread of the virus.
Dr Tedros said the risk of monkeypox is moderate globally, but high in Europe.
But, he added, "this is an outbreak that can be stopped with the right strategies in the right groups". The WHO is issuing recommendations, which it hopes will spur countries to take action to stop transmission of the virus and protect those most at risk.
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July 30, 2022 at 04:55AM
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Monkeypox: First deaths outside Africa in Brazil and Spain - BBC
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Thursday, July 28, 2022
Wednesday, July 27, 2022
New studies agree that animals sold at Wuhan market are most likely what started Covid-19 pandemic - CNN
(CNN)In June, the World Health Organization recommended that scientists continue to research all possible origins of the Covid-19 pandemic, including a lab leak. Two newly published studies take totally different approaches but arrive at the same conclusion: The Huanan Seafood Market in Wuhan, China, was most likely the epicenter for the coronavirus.
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July 27, 2022 at 08:36AM
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New studies agree that animals sold at Wuhan market are most likely what started Covid-19 pandemic - CNN
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Tuesday, July 26, 2022
Monkeypox: CDC says US leads globally in most known cases - BBC
More than 3,800 monkeypox cases have been reported in the US, the most of any country around the globe, government health data shows.
The rising number of cases has reportedly prompted the Biden administration to mull declaring a national health emergency.
The virus has already been classified as a global health emergency by the World Health Organization (WHO).
To date, more than 18,000 cases have been reported in 75 countries.
According to data published online by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as of 25 July there were 3,846 confirmed or suspected monkeypox cases in the US.
The figure - which comes amid expanded testing in addition to the growing outbreak of the virus - is now ahead of that of Spain, where 3,105 cases have so far been reported.
The two other countries with the highest number of infections, Germany and the UK, have reported 2,352 and 2,208 cases, respectively.
With cases in the US rising, the Washington Post on 25 July reported that the Biden administration was considering declaring a public health emergency.
The measure would allow the government to use federal funds to combat the outbreak, raise public awareness and better collect relevant health data.
Additionally, the administration is reportedly preparing to name a coordinator to oversee the government's response to monkeypox from the White House.
On July 21, 50 Democratic lawmakers sent an open letter to President Joe Biden, urging him to declare a public health emergency and send millions of vaccine doses to the US from manufacturing facilities overseas.
While officials have said that gay and bisexual men - as well as healthcare workers - have so far been most at risk, fears are mounting that the virus could spread to other segments of the population.
On 22 July, the US confirmed the first cases of monkeypox in children.
The US response to the virus has so far been plagued by vaccine shortages and a slow start to testing, leading some to compare the situation to the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic in early 2020.
In Washington DC, for example, officials have warned that a "rapid increase in cases", coupled with a "very limited" supply of vaccines, means that authorities must prioritise high-risk residents.
The city currently has the highest per capita total of infections, with 172 cases reported in the district.
Most monkeypox cases are mild, with initial symptoms including a high fever, swollen lymph nodes and a blistery, chickenpox-like rash or lesions.
So far, no deaths from the virus have been reported in the US.
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July 26, 2022 at 09:27PM
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Monkeypox: CDC says US leads globally in most known cases - BBC
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Monkeypox: What you must know about the virus — and how to protect yourself - Fox News
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As the monkeypox virus becomes a health concern that Americans seem to hear about more and more, what are some of the best practices for avoiding the virus — and is it time to worry?
Fox News Digital talked on Monday with Dr. Marc Siegel, a physician and professor of medicine at the NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City, and a Fox News contributor, about the monkeypox virus.
He said the virus is usually not serious, though the rash is "painful" and "can cause scarring," he said.
WHO DECLARES MONKEYPOX A GLOBAL HEALTH EMERGENCY
Dr. Siegel said that no one should get "in the gear of panic," as many people did with the COVID pandemic.
"I think it's difficult to contract," said Dr. Siegel about monkeypox. "I would just say be aware of close contact with people with a rash."
Saying that health officials still believe "it's mainly in the men-who-have-sex-with-men community," Siegel shared that that is currently their "main focus."
MONKEYPOX BY THE NUMBERS: FACTS ABOUT THE RARE VIRUS THAT'S CURRENTLY SPREADING
Dr. Siegel emphasized that, "given the difficulty of the spread of this thing, it's not going to be like another COVID."
"I'm calling for an emergency use authorization for TPOXX [an anti-viral drug], which works," Dr. Siegel said.
"But you can't even get it now unless you sign up first for a protocol."
There are two vaccines for monkeypox, said Siegel, "one that is the old live virus vaccine — that's a lot like a smallpox vaccine that I had as a kid," he added.
Monkeypox is "not going to be like another COVID."
"There's a national stockpile of that and [it's] over 100 million doses," he explained.
"But the problem with that is we don't really want to be giving that unless we have a huge outbreak because it's a live virus vaccine" — and as such, it "has side effects."
There is also an "inactivated" vaccine called JYANNEOS. "That is the way to go," said Dr. Siegel.
The physician believes that a word of caution to the gay community is appropriate from health professionals, along with the advice to remain calm.
"Again, we don't want to panic, treating this like COVID," said Dr. Siegel.
"I'm more concerned about sexual transmission at this point," he said.
MONKEYPOX MUTATING MORE THAN PREVIOUSLY THOUGHT, EXPERTS SAY
Below is some key information and "best practices" when it comes to monkeypox, so that everyone can protect themselves as much as possible.
What is monkeypox?
"Monkeypox is a rare disease caused by infection with the monkeypox virus. Monkeypox virus is part of the same family of viruses as variola virus, the virus that causes smallpox," the CDC notes on its website.
Monkeypox symptoms are milder than smallpox symptoms — and monkeypox is rarely fatal.
The virus is not related to chickenpox, says the CDC. Monkeypox was discovered in 1958 when two outbreaks of a pox-like disease showed up in monkeys kept for research.
Why is it called monkeypox?
Despite its name, the source of the disease is unknown.
However, it is possible that African rodents and non-human primates (such as monkeys) might harbor the virus and infect people, the CDC says on its website.
What are the symptoms of monkeypox?
Monkeypox symptoms include headache, muscle aches, exhaustion, fever, backache, the swelling of lymph nodes and chills.
Within one to three days, a rash and lesions can also develop, according to the CDC.
What preventative steps can be taken against monkeypox?
The CDC shares many healthy actions all of us can take to limit contact and transmission of the disease.
Among these tips: Avoid close, skin-to-skin contact with people who have a rash.
Do not handle or touch the bedding, towels or clothing of a person with monkeypox.
Do not touch the rash or scabs of anyone who has monkeypox.
Do not share eating utensils, plates or cups with someone who has the virus.
WHITE HOUSE COVID ADVISER ADDRESSES CURRENT MONKEYPOX THREAT LEVEL
Do not handle or touch the bedding, towels or clothing of a person with monkeypox.
Wash your hands often with soap and water — or use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer.
If you're in Central and West Africa, avoid contact with animals that might spread the virus. They would usually be rodents and primates.
Also, avoid sick or dead animals, as well as the bedding or anything else they have touched, noted the CDC.
What do you do if you contract monkeypox?
Isolate at home. Very close personal contact is another cause of the rapid spread of the virus.
If you have an active rash or other symptoms, "stay in a separate room or area away from people or pets you live with, when possible," noted the CDC.
"I am going to keep up my COVID protocols to stay safe from monkeypox," a human resources professional from Kensington, Maryland — who recently recovered from COVID — told Fox News Digital after she heard about the CDC's best practices.
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"I have COVID fatigue, but I also have common-sense habits I gained from it, too, that I will continue," she noted.
"Wash your hands, keep healthy distances and up your housekeeping practices — both at home and at work," she also said.
Deirdre Reilly is a senior editor, lifestyle, with Fox News Digital.
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July 26, 2022 at 07:45AM
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Monkeypox: What you must know about the virus — and how to protect yourself - Fox News
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Monkeypox vaccine from Bavarian Nordic wins EU approval - Reuters
OSLO, July 25 (Reuters) - Danish biotechnology company Bavarian Nordic (BAVA.CO) said on Monday the European Commission had given permission for its Imvanex vaccine to be marketed as protection against monkeypox, as recommended last week by the European Medicines Agency (EMA).
The approval comes just one day after the World Health Organization issued a high-level alert declaring the rapidly spreading monkeypox outbreak as a global health emergency. read more
"The availability of an approved vaccine can significantly improve nations' readiness to fight emerging diseases, but only through investments and structured planning of the biological preparedness," Bavarian Chief Executive Paul Chaplin said.
Bavarian's vaccine, the only one to have won approval for the prevention of monkeypox disease in the United States and Canada, has in the EU so far only been approved to treat smallpox.
But the company has supplied the vaccine to several EU countries during the current monkeypox outbreak for what is known as "off-label" use.
The approval is valid in all European Union Member States as well as in Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway, Bavarian Nordic said in a statement.
The development of Imvanex was made possible through significant investments from the U.S. government during the past two decades, the company added.
Bavarian's share price has risen by 122% in the last three months, driven by strong demand for the monkeypox vaccine.
Reporting by Terje Solsvik; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Kim Coghill
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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July 25, 2022 at 07:32PM
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Monkeypox vaccine from Bavarian Nordic wins EU approval - Reuters
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Monday, July 25, 2022
White House expected to name monkeypox coordinator - CNN
(CNN)The White House is working on naming a monkeypox coordinator as they prepare for the possibility of more cases emerging within the United States.
CNN's Deidre McPhillips and Donald Judd contributed to this report.
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July 26, 2022 at 04:52AM
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White House expected to name monkeypox coordinator - CNN
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Sunday, July 24, 2022
WHO declares monkeypox a public health emergency of international concern - CNN
(CNN)The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared the monkeypox outbreak a public health emergency of international concern.
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July 23, 2022 at 09:57PM
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WHO declares monkeypox a public health emergency of international concern - CNN
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Saturday, July 23, 2022
WHO Declares Monkeypox a Global Health Emergency - The Wall Street Journal
The World Health Organization has declared that monkeypox is a public-health emergency of international concern, despite divisions among members of the committee of experts who advise the agency, as global case numbers surpass 16,000.
This is the first time the WHO has declared a global health emergency since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in January 2020. In an unusual move, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, went against the majority view of the emergency committee in making the declaration.
Monkeypox—rarely detected outside Africa before now—has in recent weeks spread to thousands of people across dozens of countries, mainly among men who have sex with men. No deaths have been reported among the cases outside of Africa, but three people have died in Nigeria and two in the Central African Republic since the start of the year. Epidemiologists say the virus, which requires close contact to spread, is likely exploiting close-knit social and sexual networks among men who have sex with men.
Dr. Tedros said nine members of the advisory panel were against declaring a public-health emergency of international concern, or PHEIC, and six were in favor. The committee didn’t hold a formal vote on its recommendation, but members expressed their views. The decision to declare a PHEIC is ultimately in the hands of the director-general, who considers the views of the committee, among other factors, to come to a decision.
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That division reflects the challenging nuances of the monkeypox outbreak. Some emergency committee members expressed concerns that declaring a PHEIC might cause undue alarm among the general public when the disease is currently affecting a specific group of people, according to a report of the meeting. They also were concerned that declaring a PHEIC could encourage stigmatization of that group, hampering efforts to control the virus.
But those in favor of declaring a PHEIC believed that doing so would mobilize more resources to tackle the outbreak. They also voiced concerns about the occurrence of cases in pregnant women and children that, while small, were reminiscent of the early days of the HIV pandemic. Those members also pointed to gaps in knowledge about monkeypox, such as possible modes of transmission and the effectiveness of the vaccines and treatments used to fight the disease. Declaring a PHEIC could release more research funding toward efforts to answer these questions, they said.
The move is effectively a call to arms for governments to step up their responses to an emerging health threat. In practice, though, the WHO doesn’t have the power to compel governments to do so. The WHO’s director-general can also make recommendations to the international community, although they aren’t legally binding.
It is unclear whether a PHEIC declaration has the desired effect, said Clare Wenham, associate professor of global health policy at the London School of Economics. “The assumption that it’ll suddenly open up financing is an assumption,” she said. “We simply don’t know what a PHEIC does.”
Many governments, including the U.S., have taken steps to curb the spread of monkeypox, for example by offering vaccination to those most at risk of exposure to the virus, although some local public-health leaders say they need more funding to mount an effective response. The existing action by governments was among the reasons given by some committee members that a PHEIC wasn’t necessary.
The WHO issued recommendations for different groups of countries. For countries experiencing an outbreak, the recommendations included engaging and protecting the affected communities, intensifying surveillance and public-health measures, and accelerating research into the use of vaccines, treatments and other tools.
The WHO had previously convened its emergency committee in June but said the outbreak didn’t at that point constitute a global health emergency. Back then, the disease had reported 3,040 cases across 47 countries.
Unusual for an emerging disease, there are already vaccines and treatments that can be used to counter monkeypox. That is because some governments have invested in developing defenses against the accidental or deliberate reintroduction of smallpox, a closely related but much more severe virus. Some countries hold these treatments and vaccines in national stockpiles, but they aren’t readily available everywhere.
In some places, including the U.S., U.K. and parts of Canada, broad groups of men who have sex with men are being offered vaccination in an effort to slow the spread, although vaccine supplies have so far been constrained. Public-health authorities also are working to raise awareness among men who have sex with men about the spread of monkeypox.
The U.S. has so far reported more than 2,800 cases from various parts of the country. A group of about 50 House Democrats this week called on the Biden administration to declare monkeypox a public-health emergency. The Department of Health and Human Services said Friday it was considering whether to take this action.
Governments are mainly using a smallpox shot made by Danish vaccine maker Bavarian Nordic A/S that was developed as a safer alternative to older smallpox vaccines. That vaccine, known as Jynneos in the U.S., was primarily intended for use as a smallpox defense, but the Food and Drug Administration also authorized it for monkeypox when it approved the shot in 2019. Another, older smallpox vaccine, called ACAM2000, also is available in the U.S. but is rarely used because it has potentially serious side effects. A third vaccine, called LC16, is currently available only in Japan, according to Tim Nguyen, WHO’s head of high-impact events preparedness.
WHO officials said Saturday that despite the disease’s growing spread, they believed there was still an opportunity to bring it under control with the tools available.
“We don’t know for sure if we’ll be able to support countries enough, and communities enough, to stop this outbreak,” said Rosamund Lewis, the WHO’s technical lead for monkeypox. “We think it is still possible precisely because it remains primarily in one group who are very active in health-seeking behavior and supporting each other in reducing risk.”
The sudden global spread of monkeypox follows increasing concerns in parts of Africa about its growing presence there. For decades, the disease was detected mainly in the forests of the Congo Basin in central Africa among people who caught it from wild animals they had hunted, handled or eaten. But five years ago, Nigeria experienced an outbreak in some urban and suburban areas after nearly 40 years without a case. Although Nigerian public-health officials contained that flare-up, a few dozen cases have been recorded in the country most years since.
Researchers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which has for decades grappled with monkeypox, have said the virus is now spreading differently there. Monkeypox is showing up in different parts of the country, not just in the rainforest regions where it was historically seen.
The WHO is also urging researchers to investigate poorly understood aspects of monkeypox such as whether it is possible to have the disease without showing symptoms or whether it can be spread in ways other than close contact.
The symptoms of monkeypox also appear to be more varied than in earlier outbreaks in Africa. Classic monkeypox starts with flulike symptoms including fever and aches, with the later appearance of a rash usually starting on the face. In the current outbreak, doctors have described some cases in which the rash appears before a fever and other cases in which the rash remains concentrated in the genital area, for example.
The WHO had previously applied the designation of a public-health emergency of international concern on six occasions: H1N1 swine flu in 2009, polio in 2014, Ebola in 2014, Zika in 2016, Ebola again in another outbreak in 2019 and Covid-19 in 2020.
Write to Denise Roland at Denise.Roland@wsj.com
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July 24, 2022 at 05:48AM
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WHO Declares Monkeypox a Global Health Emergency - The Wall Street Journal
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Measles is “growing global threat,” CDC tells doctors in alert message - Ars Technica
Enlarge / A baby with measles. CDC The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is putting clinicians on alert about the growing r...
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For the first time since June, the number of projected Covid-19 deaths in the US is decreasing - CNN(CNN) For the first time since June, the rate of new Covid-19 deaths in the US is expected to decrease over the next four weeks, according...
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WASHINGTON (AP) — New obesity drugs are showing promising results in helping some people shed pounds but the injections will remain out of...
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Enlarge / The influenza virus from an image produced from an image taken with transmission electron microscopy. Viral diameter ranges fr...