Children at risk as mpox variant hits Congo displacement camps
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[July 24, 2024]
By Djaffar Al Katanty, Jennifer Rigby and Sonia Rolley
GOMA (Reuters) - Scars from the mpox pustules are still visible on
7-year old Grace Kabuo’s face, as well as on a handful of her playmates
at a camp for displaced people near Goma, in the Democratic Republic of
Congo.
Grace has otherwise recovered from the virus. Her mother Denise Kahindo
says she is still unsure how her daughter was infected earlier this
month.
“I just helplessly noticed the symptoms on her body,” she said.
For disease experts, Grace's case embodies a new concern about mpox,
which was first identified over 50 years ago. Her infection was caused
by a new variant that appears to be more capable of transmitting between
people than previous strains.
Local doctors say they have seen 130 suspected mpox cases, almost
entirely in children and adolescents, in the last four weeks at a nearby
facility that treats displaced people from the camps in the last four
weeks.
“Fifty percent [of the 130 cases] are even less than five years old,”
said Dr Pierre-Olivier Ngadjole, a medical advisor for Medair, a charity
helping with treating and transporting patients from the camp near Goma
to the nearby medical center in Munigi. An estimated 750,000 people have
fled to the area due to fighting between the M23 rebel group and the
Congolese government.
“You know the children, they play together… and in the displaced person
camps, people are side-by-side,” he added.
Mpox, a viral infection that can spread through close contact is usually
mild but can lead to death in some cases. It causes flu-like symptoms
and pus-filled lesions on the body.
The current mpox outbreak in Congo has already seen around 27,000 cases,
and claimed more than 1,100 lives, most of them children, since the
beginning of 2023. It began with the spread of an endemic strain, known
as Clade I. But the new variant, known as Clade Ib, appears to spread
more easily through routine close contact, as seems to be the case among
children.
'PUBLIC HEALTH PROBLEM'
“Mpox is a public health problem – not only for endemic countries but
also for others. So we must act now,” said microbiologist Jean-Jacques
Muyembe-Tamfum, head of Congo’s Insitut National pour la Recherche
Biomedicale (INRB).
Another mpox variant, Clade IIb, prompted an international health
emergency when it spread globally in 2022, mainly through sexual contact
among men who have sex with men. Public health officials in the United
States and Europe launched campaigns to promote safe sex practices and
vaccinated at-risk populations to curb the spread.
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Christian Musema, a laboratory nurse, takes a sample from a child
declared a suspected case Mpox - an infectious disease caused by the
monkeypox virus that spark-off a painful rash, enlarged lymph nodes
and fever; at the the treatment centre in Munigi, following Mpox
cases in Nyiragongo territory near Goma, North Kivu province,
Democratic Republic of the Congo July 19, 2024. REUTERS/Arlette
Bashizi/File Photo
In Congo, there are no vaccines or
specific treatments for mpox available outside of clinical trials.
Stigma, regulatory hurdles, a lack of money, along with measles and
cholera outbreaks in the displacement camps have made it a challenge
for people to access medical tools, especially in the densely-packed
locations.
Last month, the country approved the use of two mpox vaccines, but
funding remains a significant challenge. Only a few countries have
offered to donate shots to Congo and WHO approval regulations remain
a hurdle for international vaccine organizations.
At the Munigi treatment center, some children are assigned to
isolation rooms used in past Ebola outbreaks, to help stop the
spread of mpox. They too have lesions on their faces and bodies.
“She had rashes on her arms, abdomen, and even on her tongue,” said
Jacqueline Musengimana, mother of Sandrine Sibomana, 5, who is also
recovered.
Doctors at the center said they have discharged 82 patients and not
seen any deaths yet.
Scientists have only sequenced a handful of the cases and found
Clade Ib. There are also likely more cases going undetected, two
experts said.
Cris Kacita, head of the mpox response for the Congolese government
visited Goma last week to assess the situation. “What we fear is
that when investigations are not carried out properly ... there is
no follow-up of contacts of confirmed cases,” he said.
Muyembe-Tamfum and other health officials said work was underway by
INRB and others to access vaccines and to investigate the new
variant's transmissibility and severity. The endemic Clade in Congo
has a fatality rate of between 4% and 11%. The mortality risk for
children posed by the new variant is not yet known.
“Children will be exposed, they will be affected. At the moment they
are few in number, but we wouldn’t be surprised if that number
grows,” said Rosamund Lewis, mpox lead at the World Health
Organization in Geneva.
(Reporting by Djaffar Al Katanty in Goma, Sonia Rolley and Jennifer
Rigby, editing by Michele Gershberg)
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