Manila Standard

WHO eyes end to COVID, Mpox

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GENEVA—The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said Wednesday it hopes that COVID-19 and Mpox will no longer be public health emergencie­s in 2023 as both diseases end their most dangerous phase.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said one of the chief lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic was that countries had to respond quickly to surprise outbreaks.

On COVID-19, he said the weekly death toll was now around a fifth of what it was a year ago. "Last week, less than 10,000 people lost their lives. That's still 10,000 too many and there is still a lot that all countries can do to save lives," he said.

"But we have come a long way. We are hopeful that at some point next year, we will be able to say that COVID-19 is no longer a global health emergency."

The WHO's emergency committee, which advises Tedros on declaratio­ns of public health emergencie­s of internatio­nal concern (PHEIC), will be discussing what the end of the emergency phase might look like when they meet in January, he added.

On Mpox -- formerly known as monkeypox -- Tedros said the global outbreak had taken the world by surprise.

More than 82,000 cases have been reported from 110 countries, although the mortality rate has remained low, with 65 deaths.

"Thankfully, the number of weekly reported cases has declined more than 90 percent since I declared a PHEIC in July," Tedros said.

The Department of Health (DOH) on Thursday meanwhile gave its commitment to proactivel­y uphold accountabi­lity and transparen­cy in the country’s COVID-19 vaccine procuremen­ts during the initial public hearing held by the Senate Committee on Accountabi­lity of Public Officers and Investigat­ions

(Blue Ribbon Committee).

The DOH, led by Officer-In-Charge (OIC) Maria Rosario Singh-Vergeire, likewise reiterated that it will continue to exhaust all efforts to ensure that vaccine wastage among national government-procured vaccines remain minimal.

Following recent reports that millions of doses of vaccines stocks have expired, the DOH noted that bulk of the wastage comes from procuremen­ts made by the private sector (44.82%) and LGUs (33.35%).

Furthermor­e, the DOH revealed that 10.95% of the country’s total accumulate­d expired vaccines was donated through the COVAX facility.

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