The Guardian (USA)

Biden says ‘everybody’ should be concerned about spread of monkeypox

- Ramon Antonio Vargas and agencies

Joe Biden said Sunday that “everybody” should be worried about the spread of monkeypox recently, and his national security adviser assured the public that the US has a “vaccine that is relevant to treating” the virus.

During an official visit to South Korea, Biden told reporters, “They haven’t told me the level of exposure yet but it is something that everybody should be concerned about.” The president, who was speaking at Osan airbase, also added: “It is a concern in that if it were to spread it would be consequent­ial.”

Initially, Biden said the government was exploring what vaccine “if any might be available” to protect people against the virus. But later his national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the US had a “vaccine available to be deployed” against the monkeypox virus if necessary.

Federal Centers for Disease Control officials have previously said that people who are exposed to monkeypox, which has a slow incubation period, can be given existing smallpox vaccines to limit the sickness’ severity.

Biden’s first remarks on the growing outbreak of the rare virus came a day after a senior adviser for the World Health Organizati­on said the monkeypox seemed to be spreading through sexual contact and admonished that case numbers could continue climbing over the summer as people attended festivals and other major gatherings.

“What seems to be happening now is that it has got into the population as a sexual form, as a genital form, and is being spread, as are sexually transmitte­d infections, which has amplified its transmissi­on around the world,” said the WHO adviser, David Heymann.

Entering Sunday, public health authoritie­s had confirmed about 80 cases in nine European countries, along with the US, Canada and Australia. Another 50 cases were suspected infections awaiting confirmati­on.

In the US, Massachuse­tts health officials confirmed the first case of the disease in that state on Wednesday. That patient had recently traveled to Canada.

A New York City resident later in the week tested positive for the virus which causes monkeypox, with the federal Centers for Disease Control on Saturday still investigat­ing whether the illness was present.

The virus comes from wild animals, including rodents and primates, but can occasional­ly transfer to humans – with most of those cases traced to central and west Africa. It can cause fever, body aches, chills and fatigue, and it occasional­ly shows up in the US, including last year in a couple of people who had just traveled to Nigeria.

People with severe cases can also develop rash and pus-filled lesions on the face, palms of the hands and other body parts.

The virus doesn’t spread easily between people, but transmissi­on can occur through contact with body fluids, monkeypox sores, touching clothing or bedding that have been contaminat­ed with fluids or sores, or through respirator­y droplets during prolonged faceto-face contact.

Health officials have made it a point to say that the monkeypox is harder to spread – and therefore easier to contain – than Covid-19.

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