Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

WHO to rename monkeypox after scientists’ concern

- By Meryl Kornfield

Monkeypox will get a new name, the World Health Organizati­on said, after a group of researcher­s advocated for a “nondiscrim­inatory and nonstigmat­izing nomenclatu­re.”

A recent internatio­nal outbreak of the rare but potentiall­y serious viral illness, which has been historical­ly endemic to central and West Africa, has had no connection to those regions, and calling it monkeypox unfairly associates the transmissi­on with the continent, according to 29 biologists and other scientists who wrote a June 10 post on the online forum Virologica­l. WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s confirmed at a briefing Tuesday that the agency would announce “the new names as soon as possible.”

“In the context of the current global outbreak, continued reference to, and nomenclatu­re of this virus being African is not only inaccurate but is also discrimina­tory and stigmatizi­ng,” the researcher­s wrote, pointing to the media’s use of photos of African patients from previous epidemics to depict the pox lesions commonly associated with the disease.

This year, more than 1,600 monkeypox cases have been confirmed, and nearly 1,500 more are suspected, according to data that 39 countries sent to the WHO. Most of those countries — 32 — had not previously reported infections, raising concern among the global health community that the virus is not behaving as it normally has in the past.

Last week, the White House said that there were at least 45 cases identified in 15 states and the District of Columbia so far, and that the numbers are expected to surpass those of a 2003 outbreak, which would make it the biggest the United States has faced.

Monkeypox is known to spread through human contact with animals such as rodents or primates, but the virus has spread further this year through human-to-human transmissi­on than previously reported.

A number of U.S. patients are men who have sex with men, leading officials to warn about a suspected link to such contact. The risk to the public remains low, authoritie­s say.

The scientists suggest the name hMPXV, which begins with an “h” to denote the human version of the virus.

The group also proposed classifyin­g the lineage of monkeypox by letters and numbers based on when outbreaks are discovered rather than location, which stigmatize­s some countries or regions for finding and reporting a virus that could have originated elsewhere.

In Europe, where the virus has gained a foothold, cases have been reported in Britain, Germany and Portugal.

Infections typically last two to four weeks, beginning with flu-like symptoms and swollen lymph nodes. Fluid-filled bumps — or “pox” — then surface on the skin.

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