WHO experts split on monkeypox emergency ahead of decision - sources
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[July 23, 2022]
By Jennifer Rigby
LONDON (Reuters) - Members of a World
Health Organization (WHO) expert group are split over whether the
monkeypox outbreak represents a global health emergency, but the
agency's director-general may still issue the maximum alert on Saturday,
two sources close to the decision told Reuters.
The committee, which met on Thursday, provides advice to WHO
Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who is responsible for
making the final decision over whether to declare a global health
emergency.
In the past, Tedros has always gone with the committee's recommendation,
but the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he was
seriously considering declaring the agency's highest level of alert
despite the lack of a majority opinion due to his concern about the
urgency of the situation.
The WHO is due to hold a news conference at 1300 GMT on Saturday to
announce his ultimate decision.
The label - a "public health emergency of international concern" -
currently only applies to the coronavirus pandemic and ongoing efforts
to eradicate polio.
In recent weeks, pressure has been increasing from scientists and public
health experts for the WHO and national governments to take more action
on monkeypox. There have now been more than 14,000 cases reported, and
five deaths, from 71 WHO member states.
When the committee first met at the end of June, there were only about
3,000 cases.
The WHO alert serves to raise the alarm and can also
unlock funding and global efforts to collaborate on sharing vaccines and
treatments.
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Tareco Timothy receives a monkeypox vaccination at the Northwell
Health Immediate Care Center at Fire Island-Cherry Grove, in New
York, U.S., July 15, 2022. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/
There are already effective treatments and vaccines for monkeypox,
but they are in short supply. The WHO has also already been
providing advice and updates since the outbreak began in early May.
At the first meeting of the expert committee, the group said it
would reconsider its position on the emergency declaration if the
outbreak escalated.
In Europe and the United States, cases have almost entirely been
reported among men who have sex with men, and the committee also
said it would reconsider if other groups began to report cases,
particularly children or others who have been more vulnerable to the
virus in past outbreaks in endemic countries.
On Friday, the United States identified its first two monkeypox
cases in children.
Any changes to the virus itself, which spreads through close contact
and causes lesions and flu-like symptoms, could also spark a
rethink, the committee has said.
The group is now split between those who think an emergency
declaration would accelerate efforts to contain the disease, and
those who do not think it meets the criteria because it has not yet
spread to new groups of people or had a high fatality rate, the
sources said.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; Editing by Helen Popper)
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