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Monkey pox: WHO removes distinction between endemic and non-endemic countries

2022-06-18T20:22:46.975Z


“We present the countries together when possible, in order to reflect the unified response which is necessary” in the face of the virus now


To better "unify" the response to the virus, the World Health Organization removed the distinction between endemic and non-endemic countries in its statistics on monkeypox.

Usually circulating in Central and West Africa, the virus is now present on several continents.

"We are removing the distinction between endemic and non-endemic countries, and presenting countries together when possible, to reflect the unified response that is needed," WHO said in its newsletter of 17 June sent this Saturday to the media.

From January 1 to June 15, “a total of 2,103 confirmed cases, one probable case and one death (

Nigeria

) have been reported to WHO from 42 countries,” it says.

On June 23, it will assess whether the current outbreak represents a "public health emergency of international concern", its highest level of alert.

A transmission that dates back to 2017?

The European region is at the center of the spread of the virus, with 1,773 confirmed cases, or 84% of the global total.

Next comes the American continent (245 cases, 12%), followed by Africa (64 cases, 3%) and the regions of the eastern Mediterranean (14 cases) and the western Pacific (7 cases).

The WHO considers it likely that the actual number of cases is higher.

She considers that the virus must have already been circulating before the current outbreak without its transmission being detected.

This “could date back to 2017,” she says.

Since 2017, a few imported cases, particularly from Nigeria, have indeed been sporadically identified in several countries.

Read alsoOn the trail of the first human case, in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1970

In the current outbreak, the majority of reported cases so far are in men who have sex with men.

The vast majority, however, had not traveled to African countries where the virus was endemic.

Less dangerous than its cousin smallpox

Known in humans since 1970, monkeypox or "simian orthopoxvirus" is considered much less dangerous and contagious than its cousin, smallpox, eradicated in 1980. It is a disease considered rare, caused by a virus transmitted to humans by infected animals.

But in the current outbreak, human-to-human transmission is at the forefront.

There are two main groups (clades) of monkeypox virus, that of West Africa (case fatality rate around 1%) and that of the Congo Basin (case fatality rate up to 10%).

In all cases reported in countries newly affected by the virus, it is the West African clade that has been identified.

Source: leparis

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