Texarkana Gazette

WHO leader deems monkeypox urgent

Calls for global, coordinate­d action

- NICK CUMMING-BRUCE

GENEVA — The World Health Organizati­on’s top official in Europe on Wednesday called for urgent action by authoritie­s and civic groups to control fast-rising cases of monkeypox that he said posed a real risk to public health.

Europe has emerged as the epicenter of an outbreak of monkeypox, with more than 1,500 cases identified in 25 European countries, which account for 85% of global cases, Dr. Hans Kluge, the WHO’s director of its European region, said at a news conference.

The WHO will convene its emergency committee in Geneva next week, Kluge added, to determine if the outbreak constitute­s a public health emergency of internatio­nal concern, a formal declaratio­n that calls for a coordinate­d response among countries.

“The magnitude of this outbreak poses a real risk,” Kluge said. “The longer the virus circulates, the more it will extend its reach, and the stronger the disease’s foothold will get in nonendemic countries.”

Monkeypox is a viral infection endemic in West Africa that has now spread to 39 countries, including 32 that have no previous experience of it, the WHO director-general, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, told reporters Tuesday. Countries outside Africa and Europe that have identified cases of monkeypox include Australia, Brazil, Canada, Israel and the United States.

Infections mostly result from close physical contact and mainly affect men who have sex with men, but monkeypox can also spread through respirator­y droplets in prolonged face-to-face contact, Andrea Ammon, director of the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control, said at the news conference Wednesday. Monkeypox cases have also been found among close family members, but the risks of transmissi­on among the general population, Ammon said, were “rather low.”

Monkeypox is not attached to any single social group, Kluge said, cautioning that stigmatizi­ng the virus as a gay disease would undermine efforts to develop an effective public health response, as it had in tackling HIV and AIDS.

The WHO has recorded 27 deaths from the disease in Africa this year but none in Europe. Infections are mostly mild and do not require hospitaliz­ation, but people in close contact with those infected with the virus should also isolate for 21 days.

Kluge repeated his fears that the spread of monkeypox might accelerate during the summer months in Europe when hundreds of Pride events, music festivals and other mass gatherings will be held, but he said that monkeypox was not a reason to cancel events. The gatherings provided a valuable opportunit­y to raise awareness of the disease, he said, urging event organizers, local communitie­s and dating apps to provide clear messaging on how to prevent or deal with the illness.

Kluge called for urgent action by European countries to scale up surveillan­ce, diagnostic testing and genetic sequencing, and tracing the contacts and sexual partners of infected people. The WHO has released emergency funds to bolster laboratory capacity for identifyin­g the monkeypox virus in countries that lacked it, he said.

But mass vaccinatio­n is not recommende­d, Kluge said, echoing comments by Tedros on Tuesday, and he underscore­d concerns that rich countries would repeat the mistakes of the covid-19 pandemic and quickly monopolize the limited stocks of vaccine.

Tedros said that the WHO was working with member states to develop an initiative that would ensure more equitable access but, according to Kluge, “We’re already seeing a rush in some quarters to acquire and stockpile these.”

The WHO is also working with experts to come up as soon as possible with another name for monkeypox and the disease it produces, Tedros said Tuesday.

The present name is “misleading and stigmatizi­ng,” Christian Lindmeier, a WHO spokesman, said Wednesday. Preliminar­y research points to the possibilit­y that there has been undetected human-to-human transmissi­on for some years, but the existing name, he said, could encourage the erroneous belief that people are not susceptibl­e to infection unless exposed through contact with Africa or the animals associated with it.

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