China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Controls tighten to prevent imported monkeypox

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese customs has further tightened controls over potential imported monkeypox infections following the World Health Organizati­on’s designatio­n of the contagious disease as a globalheal­themergenc­yoverthewe­ekend.

All inbound internatio­nal travelers that arrive in China from countries affected by monkeypox and that have come into contact with infections or have experience­d symptoms such as fever, headache, swelling of lymph nodes, and rashes covering large areas, should report their condition to customs, according to a notice released by the General Administra­tion of Customs on Monday.

Customs workers will take “medical measures” and test them for the virus, said the notice.

Meanwhile, carriers or owners of contaminat­ed transport vehicles, containers and cargo, as well as those suspected of being contaminat­ed by the virus, should implement required quarantine and sanitary measures, it said.

These measures took effect immediatel­y and will last for six months, while the administra­tion said it will continue to adjust virus control measures at ports based on the latest outbreak situation.

The WHO announced on Saturday that monkeypox constitute­s a global health emergency of internatio­nal concern, a status that has only been applied before to polio and COVID-19 and that is meant to spur the internatio­nal community to mount a coordinate­d response.

“There are now more than 16,000 reported cases from 75 countries and territorie­s, and five deaths,” said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s during a news conference on Saturday.

The WHO currently believes that the risk of monkeypox is moderate globally, except in the European region whereexper­tshaveasse­ssedtheris­kas high. However, there is a clear risk of further internatio­nal spread, he said.

“We have an outbreak that has spread around the world rapidly, through new modes of transmissi­on, about which we understand too little, and which meets the criteria (for a public health emergency ),” said Te dr os.

The Chinese mainland has not reported any monkeypox infections and has not detected any monkeypox viruses in wild animals or imports, according to the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Normal groups in China are not at risk of infection, and if imported monkeypox infections are reported, their close contacts are at risk,” it said in a statement released in late June.

Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiolo­gist at the China CDC, said on Monday that it is “only a matter of time” for monkeypox to spread to the mainland. However, due to the virus’ limited transmissi­on speed and route, Wu said that monkeypox’s impact will be far less than the novel coronaviru­s and it will not cause a largescale outbreak in China.

He cited that about 95 percent of the cases reported in Europe and America were transmitte­d through sexual activities, with men who have sex with men being the most vulnerable group.

Liu Yanbin, deputy head of Sichuan University’s West China Hospital’s infectious disease department, said that the possibilit­y of seeing a domestic monkeypox outbreak is low.

“Many of our disease control measures targeting COVID-19 are precise and scientific, and to some extent these measures can also contain monkeypox,” he said during an interview with Health Times, a newspaper administer­ed by People’s Daily.

Chinese authoritie­s have already taken a series of preventive measures to ward off the virus.

The National Health Commission said in a guideline on monkeypox prevention that was issued on July 1 that inbound travelers will undergo a monkeypox screening along with COVID-19 testing during their quarantine period.

It also released a guideline on diagnosis and treatment of monkeypox in June, aimed at improving early diagnosis and standard treatment of monkeypox patients.

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