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On 25th July 2022 the WHO declared Monkeypox a global health emergency. On 27th July there were reports into widespread early Monkeypox failings, revealing how the world hasn’t learned the lessons we should have learned from the covid pandemic.
On 4th August the science community announced that vaccinating fewer than 50% of at-risk men would stop Monkeypox spreading. Is it happening? Not yet. On the one hand, as the UK government’s website says, ‘There is currently no vaccine licensed in the UK or Europe for immunisation against Monkeypox.’ On the other hand we already know the Smallpox vaccine does the job.
On 12th September we saw reports of an ‘alarming’ number of new Monkeypox cases in Australia, where it’s spreading quickly. There are 40 cases in Victoria alone, all ‘locally acquired’. The New York Times reports on treatments and tests being unavailable in much of the world, and California has reported the second possible US Monkeypox death in LA County.
Apparently early diagnosis is key to tackling the symptoms, which can be serious. Some people have suffered from myocarditis as a result of Monkeypox and experts are beginning to realise it may also cause ‘serious’ neurological damage, including inflammation of the brain, which can trigger seizures.
Lagos has seen 21 new Monkeypox cases in one week. Jordan has just reported its first case, and so has Guam, where it was brought in via an incoming traveller. Egypt has reported its first Monkeypox case, a man who has a residence in Europe. And more than 30 children have tested positive for it in the USA, which already has more than 21,500 confirmed cases. There are 12 cases in Delhi so far.
In the USA they’ve begun test trials of Siga’s antiviral treatment for the disease, and they’re considering extending the vaccine to men with HIV. Spain’s Health Minister has been talking to the WHO about the threat. In Maryland, USA, they’re carrying out clinical trials to evaluate a Monkeypox vaccine. And now, a second Monkeypox strain linked with travel to West Africa has turned up here in the UK.
So far, the government is reporting on cases up to 22nd August 2022:
Will the UK vaccinate at-risk people against Monkeypox? As the government website says, “The Health Security Agency is testing and confirming suspected cases, tracing contacts and issuing urgent advice in the clinical management of cases and contacts. In addition, UKHSA has been working closely with the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) on the role of vaccine to prevent further cases and limit ongoing spread”.
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