Mpox cases in Congo may be stabilizing. Experts say more vaccines are
needed to stamp out virus
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[November 04, 2024]
By MARIA CHENG and RUTH ALONGA
GOMA, Congo (AP) — Some health officials say mpox cases in Congo appear
to be “stabilizing” — a possible sign that the main epidemic for which
the World Health Organization made a global emergency declaration in
August might be on the decline.
In recent weeks, Congo has reported about 200 to 300 lab-confirmed mpox
cases every week, according to WHO. That’s down from nearly 400 cases a
week in July. The decline is also apparent in Kamituga, the mining city
in the eastern part of Congo where the new, more infectious variant of
mpox first emerged.
But the U.N. health agency acknowledged Friday that only 40% to 50% of
suspected infections in Congo were being tested — and that the virus is
continuing to spread in some parts of the country and elsewhere,
including Uganda.
While doctors are encouraged by the drop in infections in some parts of
Congo, it's still not clear what kinds of physical contact is driving
the outbreak. Health experts are also frustrated by the low number of
vaccine doses the central African nation has received — 265,000 — and
say that delivering the vaccine to where it's needed in the sprawling
country is proving difficult. WHO estimates 50,000 people have been
immunized in Congo, which has a population of 110 million.
Scientists also say there needs to be an urgent, broader vaccination
effort for the entire continent to halt mpox's spread and avoid further
worrisome genetic mutations, like the one detected earlier this year in
Congo after months of low-level circulation.
“If we miss this opportunity, the likelihood of another significant
outbreak increases substantially,” said Dr. Zakary Rhissa, who heads
operations in Congo for the charity Alima.
So far this year, there have been roughly 43,000 suspected cases in
Africa and more than 1,000 people have died, mostly in Congo.
“We’ve seen how past outbreaks, such as the one in Nigeria in 2017, can
lead to larger global events if not effectively contained,” he said. The
2017 epidemic ended up leading to the 2022 global outbreak of mpox that
affected more than 100 countries.
Rhissa said the decline in cases in Kamituga — where mpox initially
spread among sex workers and miners — is an opening to put more programs
in place for vaccination, surveillance and education.
Georgette Hamuli, an 18-year-old sex worker, hadn’t been aware of mpox
until immunization teams arrived last week in the poor neighborhood
where she works in Goma, the biggest city in eastern Congo.
“They told us we're highly exposed to the the risk of infection,” she
said. “We insist on condoms with our clients, but some refuse ... if
they don’t want to use a condom, they double the amount they pay.”
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2 year old Emile Miango, who has mpox, lies in a hospital, in
Kamituga, South Kivu province, Sept. 4, 2024, which is the epicenter
of the world's latest outbreak of the disease in eastern Congo. (AP
Photo/Moses Sawasawa, file)
Hamuli said she and other friends
who are sex workers each received 2,000 Congolese francs ($0.70)
from a charity to get vaccinated against mpox — but it wasn’t the
money that swayed her.
“The vaccine is also necessary," she said. "I think we’re now
protected.”
The Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has estimated
Congo needs at least 3 million mpox vaccines to stop the virus, and
another 7 million for the rest of Africa. So far, WHO and partners
have allocated 900,000 vaccines to nine African countries affected
by mpox and expect 6 million vaccines to be available by the end of
this year.
Mpox epidemics in Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda had their
origins in Congo, and a number of cases in travelers have also been
identified in Sweden, Thailand, Germany, India and Britain.
Fewer than half of the people who are most at risk in Congo have
been vaccinated, according to Heather Kerr, Congo director for the
the International Rescue Committee.
“We only have a tiny amount of vaccines, and nothing for the kids,”
she said.
The vaccines for Congo are largely coming from donor countries like
the U.S and through UNICEF, which mainly uses taxpayer money to buy
the shots.
“We’re getting a charitable approach where we only see very small
donations of vaccines to Africa,” said Dr. Chris Beyrer, director of
the Global Health Institute at Duke University. “What we need is a
public health approach where we immunize populations at scale.”
Drugmaker Bavarian Nordic, which makes the most widely used mpox
vaccine, said it would sell shots destined for Africa at the lowest
price possible.
The advocacy group Public Citizen published an analysis showing that
UNICEF paid $65 per dose of the Jynneos mpox vaccine made by
Bavarian Nordic, far higher than nearly all other vaccines used in
public health programs.
Dr. Salim Abdool Karim, an infectious diseases expert at South
Africa’s University of KwaZulu-Natal, said mpox outbreaks typically
peak and disappear quickly because of how the virus spreads. This
time, however, he said there are two complicating factors: the
virus’ transmission via sex and the continued spillover from
infected animals.
“We’re in new territory with mpox this time,” he added. “But we’re
never going to solve this until we vaccinate most of our people.”
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Cheng reported from London.
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