Global Times

NYC asks WHO to rename monkeypox

▶ Stigmatiza­tion may prevent patients from seeking needed health care

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New York City asked the World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) on Tuesday to rename the monkeypox virus to avoid stigmatizi­ng patients who might then hold off on seeking care.

New York has seen more cases of the disease, which the WHO declared a global health emergency over the weekend, than any other city in the US, with 1,092 infections detected so far.

“We have a growing concern for the potentiall­y devastatin­g and stigmatizi­ng effects that the messaging around the ‘ monkeypox’ virus can have on... already vulnerable communitie­s,” New York City Public Health Commission­er Ashwin Vasan said in a letter to

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s dated Tuesday.

The WHO had floated the idea of changing the name of the virus, which is related to the eradicated smallpox virus, during a press conference in June, a proposal Vasan mentioned in his letter.

Vasan referenced the “painful and racist history within which terminolog­y like [ monkeypox] is rooted for communitie­s of color.”

Vasan pointed to the fact that monkeypox did not actually originate in primates, as the name might suggest, and recalled the negative effects of misinforma­tion during the early days of the HIV epidemic and the racism faced by Asian communitie­s.

“Continuing to use the term ‘ monkeypox’ to describe the current outbreak may reignite these traumatic feelings of racism and stigma – particular­ly for black people and other people of color, as well as members of the LGBTQIA+ communitie­s, and it is possible that they may avoid engaging in vital health care services because of it,” Vasan said.

Anyone is susceptibl­e to contractin­g monkeypox, which has long been endemic in Central and Western Africa, but so far its spread in Europe and the US has been mostly concentrat­ed among men who have sex with other men.

The first symptoms can include a fever and fatigue, followed a few days later by a rash that can turn into painful, fluid- filled skin lesions, which may last for a few weeks before turning into scabs that then fall off.

No deaths have been reported so far in Europe or the US.

More than 16,000 confirmed cases have been recorded in 75 countries and regions so far in 2022, the WHO said on Monday.

A limited number of doses of a smallpox vaccine found to protect against monkeypox, called Jynneos, have been administer­ed in New York, mostly to gay and bisexual men.

“Continuing to use the term ‘ monkeypox’... may reignite these traumatic feelings of racism and stigma – particular­ly for black people and other people of color...”

Ashwin Vasan NYC Public Health Commission­er

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