Africa has contained monkey pox outbreaks during COVID pandemic - Africa
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[May 19, 2022]
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -Several
outbreaks of monkey pox in Africa have been contained during the COVID
pandemic while the world's attention was elsewhere, and outbreaks in
Europe and the United States are a concern, Africa's top public health
agency said on Thursday.
A handful of cases of the virus, which causes fever symptoms and a
distinctive bumpy rash, have been reported or are suspected in Britain,
Portugal, Spain and the United States.
The disease, which spreads through close contact and was first found in
monkeys, mostly occurs in west and central Africa and only rarely
spreads elsewhere.
The acting director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention said that since 2020 outbreaks had been seen and contained in
the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria, Cameroon and Central African
Republic.
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"During this pandemic, we have had
several outbreaks of monkey pox on the continent ... We also expect
that other outbreaks will come and we'll handle it in the usual
way," Ahmed Ogwell Ouma told a weekly news briefing.
"We are however concerned at the multiple countries outside,
especially in Europe, that are seeing these outbreaks of monkey pox.
It would be very useful for knowledge to be shared regarding what
the source of these outbreaks actually are," he said.
"We are in close contact with our counterparts at the European CDC
to try and understand where that did come from because when you see
monkey pox in environments that are far away from a forested area
then for sure as far as public health is concerned it raises a lot
of questions."
(Reporting by James Macharia Chege and Estelle Shirbon)
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