African health officials have called the international community not to impose travel bans on countries dealing with an outbreak of mpox.
Head of Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention Jean Kaseya called states to support the continent in rolling out testing and vaccinations instead.
It comes as a public health emergency was declared by the World Health Organisation over a new outbreak of mpox in several African nations, with at least three cases now reported outside of the continent.
Formerly known as monkeypox, the infection has been on the rise in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which accounts for 96 per cent of all cases in Africa.
More than 17,000 cases and at least 571 deaths have now been confirmed across the continent so far this year, with the WHO’s Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus calling the outbreak an “international concern”.
The outbreak comes as a new strain, named clade 1, is said to be spreading mainly through sexual networks. The WHO says it has been identified in Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda – all countries that have never reported cases of mpox before.
In the UK, health officials are preparing for any potential cases of the new strain of mpox after Europe recorded its first case of the more deadly variant last week in Sweden.
How did the UK deal with the last outbreak?
Before the spring of 2022, cases in the UK were usually associated with travel to or from West or Central Africa.
However, in May of that year sustained transmission of the virus was identified in the UK, leading to a large outbreak mostly in men who are gay, bisexual or have sex with other men.
A vaccination programme was launched in the UK in the summer of 2022 and closed the following July.
According to the UKHSA, there were 3,732 confirmed and highly probable mpox cases reported in the UK up to December 31, 2022. In 2023 and up to July 31 this year, 286 cases were reported.
Of these, 269 were in England – with 116 patients presumed to have caught the virus in the UK and 82 outside of the country.
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 08:10
Argentine quarantines cargo ship over suspected case of mpox onboard
Argentine authorities quarantined a cargo ship in the Paraná River near the inland grains port of Rosario over a suspected case of mpox onboard
The cargo, from Brasil, was stopped after officials detected one of the crew members had developed symptoms similar to the virus.
Fernando Morales, president of industry body the Argentine Naval League, said that a Liberian-flagged ship had been ordered to drop anchor in the river while a test on a crew member was carried out.
“A crew member with fever and weakness was taken to a hospital in San Nicolas. There they carried out some tests and they say that in principle it could be mpox,” Morales said, adding that the diagnosis was not yet confirmed.
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 07:50
Thailand detects first mpox case in European man
Thailand has detected an mpox case in a European man who arrived from Africa last week and is awaiting test results to determine the strain, a disease control official said.
Thai authorities were treating the case as if it were the Clade 1 form of mpox, as the person had arrived on 14 August from an African country where it was spreading, Thongchai Keeratihattayakorn, director-general of the Department of Disease Control, told Reuters.
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 07:18
African officials cal for solidarity not ‘unfair’ travel bans
African health officials have called the international community not to impose travel bans on countries dealing with an outbreak of mpox.
Africa CDC’s head Jean Kaseya said: “Don’t punish Africa. We hear from here and there that you want to apply travel ban, we need solidarity, we need you to provide appropriate support, this vaccine is expensive.
“I clearly request our partners to stop thinking about travel bans against Africa, that will bring us back to the unfair treatment from the Covid period and not help the world to move forward.”
Mr Kaseya hoped vaccines can coon arrive in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where the outbreak is believed to have originated from.
He added there had been collaboration between countries and health organisations but has warned community-level testing centres are not enough.
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 07:14
Pakistan admits it cannot find mpox patient as tighter screening to be introduced at airports
Pakistan says it is introducing new screening at airports after confirming at least one case of mpox infection, days after the World Health Organisation declared a global emergency over the virus.
Health officials are concerned about a new deadlier strain of the virus, formerly known as monkeypox, that has spread through several African countries.
The case reported in Pakistan involves a patient who had recently returned from a Gulf country. Pakistan’s health ministry said it had yet to determine the strain of the virus.
Read the full story below:
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 07:00
Doctor explains why mpox is spreading quickly as WHO declares global emergency
Doctor explains why mpox is spreading quickly as WHO declares global emergency
A doctor has given his thoughts on why an initial outbreak of mpox in the Democratic Republic of Congo has spread fast. The strain, known as clade 1b, emerged in the central African nation and has also spread to the east of the continent. “My suspicion is this particular strain is is more severe, more easily transmissible between humans, and that may be due to the fact that the virus has continued to circulate across global communities including this part of the African continent,” Erik Blutinger, emergency physician and public health specialist, said. UK health officials have said they are preparing for any potential cases after the World Health Organisation declared outbreaks of the virus in Africa a global emergency.
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 06:30
People urged to get vaccine before travelling to impacted areas of Africa
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 06:00
Congo’s humanitarian crisis helped mpox spiral again into a global health emergency
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 05:30
New deadly mpox strain likely to be in UK already, says diseases expert
A new, more deadly strain of mpox sweeping the world is highly likely to already be in the UK, a specialist in infectious diseases has warned.
Professor Paul Hunter said mpox, which used to be called monkeypox, can spread very quickly between countries because it is a sexually transmitted infection.
And he urged people at risk to get vaccinated against it or cut the number of sexual partners they have.
Read the full story below:
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 05:00
Now that mpox is a global health emergency, will it trigger another pandemic?
Salma Ouaguira21 August 2024 04:30