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Wednesday, August 27, 2025

WHO considers declaring monkeypox a global health emergency

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1161 days ago
20220623

 

By MARIA CHENG-As­so­ci­at­ed Press

 

LON­DON (AP) — As the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion con­venes its emer­gency com­mit­tee Thurs­day to con­sid­er if the spi­ral­ing out­break of mon­key­pox war­rants be­ing de­clared a glob­al emer­gency, some ex­perts say WHO’s de­ci­sion to act on­ly af­ter the dis­ease spilled in­to the West could en­trench the grotesque in­equities that arose be­tween rich and poor coun­tries dur­ing the coro­n­avirus pan­dem­ic.

De­clar­ing mon­key­pox to be a glob­al emer­gency would mean the U.N. health agency con­sid­ers the out­break to be an “ex­tra­or­di­nary event” and that the dis­ease is at risk of spread­ing across even more bor­ders. It would al­so give mon­key­pox the same dis­tinc­tion as the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic and the on­go­ing ef­fort to erad­i­cate po­lio.

Many sci­en­tists doubt any such de­c­la­ra­tion would help to curb the epi­dem­ic, since the de­vel­oped coun­tries record­ing the most re­cent cas­es are al­ready mov­ing quick­ly to shut it down.

Last week, WHO Di­rec­tor-Gen­er­al Tedros Ad­hanom Ghe­breye­sus de­scribed the re­cent mon­key­pox epi­dem­ic iden­ti­fied in more than 40 coun­tries, most­ly in Eu­rope, as “un­usu­al and con­cern­ing.” Mon­key­pox has sick­ened peo­ple for decades in cen­tral and west Africa, where one ver­sion of the dis­ease kills up to 10% of peo­ple. In the epi­dem­ic be­yond Africa so far, no deaths have been re­port­ed.

“If WHO was re­al­ly wor­ried about mon­key­pox spread, they could have con­vened their emer­gency com­mit­tee years ago when it reemerged in Nige­ria in 2017 and no one knew why we sud­den­ly had hun­dreds of cas­es,” said Oye­wale To­mori, a Niger­ian vi­rol­o­gist who sits on sev­er­al WHO ad­vi­so­ry groups. “It is a bit cu­ri­ous that WHO on­ly called their ex­perts when the dis­ease showed up in white coun­tries,” he said.

Un­til last month, mon­key­pox had not caused size­able out­breaks be­yond Africa. Sci­en­tists haven’t found any ma­jor ge­net­ic changes in the virus and a lead­ing ad­vis­er to WHO said last month the surge of cas­es in Eu­rope was like­ly tied to sex­u­al ac­tiv­i­ty among gay and bi­sex­u­al men at two raves in Spain and Bel­gium.

To date, the U.S. Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion has con­firmed more than 3,300 cas­es of mon­key­pox in 42 coun­tries where the virus hasn’t been typ­i­cal­ly seen. More than 80% of cas­es are in Eu­rope. Mean­while, Africa has al­ready seen more than 1,400 cas­es this year, in­clud­ing 62 deaths.

David Fi­dler, a se­nior fel­low in glob­al health at the Coun­cil on For­eign Re­la­tions, said WHO’s new­found at­ten­tion to mon­key­pox amid its spread be­yond Africa could in­ad­ver­tent­ly wors­en the di­vide be­tween rich and poor coun­tries seen dur­ing COVID-19.

“There may be le­git­i­mate rea­sons why WHO on­ly raised the alarm when mon­key­pox spread to rich coun­tries, but to poor coun­tries, that looks like a dou­ble stan­dard,” Fi­dler said. He said the glob­al com­mu­ni­ty was still strug­gling to en­sure the world’s poor were vac­ci­nat­ed against the coro­n­avirus and that it was un­clear if Africans even want­ed mon­key­pox vac­cines, giv­en com­pet­ing pri­or­i­ties like malar­ia and HIV.

“Un­less African gov­ern­ments specif­i­cal­ly ask for vac­cines, it might be a bit pa­tron­iz­ing to send them be­cause it’s in the West’s in­ter­est to stop mon­key­pox from be­ing ex­port­ed,” Fi­dler said.

WHO has al­so pro­posed cre­at­ing a vac­cine-shar­ing mech­a­nism to help af­fect­ed coun­tries, which could see dos­es go to rich coun­tries like Britain, which has the biggest mon­key­pox out­break be­yond Africa — and re­cent­ly widened its use of vac­cines.

To date, the vast ma­jor­i­ty of cas­es in Eu­rope have been in men who are gay or bi­sex­u­al, or oth­er men who have sex with men, but sci­en­tists warn any­one in close con­tact with an in­fect­ed per­son or their cloth­ing or bed­sheets is at risk of in­fec­tion, re­gard­less of their sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion. Peo­ple with mon­key­pox of­ten ex­pe­ri­ence symp­toms like fever, body aches and a rash; most re­cov­er with­in weeks with­out need­ing med­ical care.

Even if WHO an­nounces mon­key­pox is a glob­al emer­gency, it’s un­clear what im­pact that might have.

In Jan­u­ary 2020, WHO de­clared that COVID-19 was an in­ter­na­tion­al emer­gency. But few coun­tries took no­tice un­til March, when the or­ga­ni­za­tion de­scribed it as a pan­dem­ic, weeks af­ter many oth­er au­thor­i­ties did so. WHO was lat­er slammed for its mul­ti­ple mis­steps through­out the pan­dem­ic, which some ex­perts said might be prompt­ing a quick­er mon­key­pox re­sponse.

“Af­ter COVID, WHO does not want to be the last to de­clare mon­key­pox an emer­gency,” said Aman­da Glass­man, ex­ec­u­tive vice pres­i­dent at the Cen­ter for Glob­al De­vel­op­ment. “This may not rise to the lev­el of a COVID-like emer­gency, but it is still a pub­lic health emer­gency that needs to be ad­dressed.”

Sal­im Ab­dool Karim, an epi­demi­ol­o­gist and vice chan­cel­lor at the Uni­ver­si­ty of KwaZu­lu-Na­tal in South Africa, said WHO and oth­ers should be do­ing more to stop mon­key­pox in Africa and else­where, but wasn’t con­vinced that a glob­al emer­gency de­c­la­ra­tion would help.

“There is this mis­placed idea that Africa is this poor, help­less con­ti­nent, when in fact, we do know how to deal with epi­demics,” said Ab­dool Karim. He said that stop­ping the out­break ul­ti­mate­ly de­pends on things like sur­veil­lance, iso­lat­ing pa­tients and pub­lic ed­u­ca­tion.

“Maybe they need vac­cines in Eu­rope to stop mon­key­pox, but here, we have been able to con­trol it with very sim­ple mea­sures,” he said.

 

 

WHO Monkeypox


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