Congo receives long-awaited mpox vaccine doses
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[September 06, 2024]
By Ange Kasongo and Justin Makangara
KINSHASA (Reuters) -Democratic Republic of Congo received its first
batch of mpox vaccines on Thursday, which health authorities hope will
help curb an outbreak that has prompted the U.N. to declare a global
public health emergency.
Congo is the epicenter of the outbreak, which has spread to neighboring
countries and elsewhere, but a lack of vaccines in Africa has hampered
efforts to stop the spread of the sometimes deadly disease.
A plane carrying doses manufactured by Bavarian Nordic and donated by
the European Union touched down in the capital Kinshasa around 13:00
local time (12:00 GMT), Reuters reporters at the airport said.
Congo's health minister, Samuel Roger Kamba Mulamba, told reporters the
newly arrived vaccine had already proved its worth in the United States
and would be rolled out to adults in Congo.
"We know which provinces are heavily affected, notably Equateur and
South Kivu... The idea is to contain the virus as quickly as possible,"
he added.
This first delivery amounts to 99,000 doses and a further delivery on
Saturday will take the total to 200,000 doses, said Laurent Muschel, the
head of the EU Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Authority
(HERA).
Overall, Europe aims to deliver 566,000 doses to wherever needs are
greatest in the region, Muschel told Reuters. "Based on the number of
cases, the next country (for deliveries) should be Burundi, but the
country's medical agency must authorize it."
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Doses of Bavarian Nordic's Imvanex vaccine, used to protect against
mpox virus, at the Edison municipal vaccination centre in Paris,
France July 27, 2022. Alain Jocard/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
The arrival of the vaccine in Congo
should start to address a huge inequity that has left African
countries with no access to the two shots used in a 2022 global mpox
outbreak, while they were widely available in Europe and the United
States.
Congo has said it will launch its vaccination campaign on Oct. 8 to
allow time for a thorough awareness-raising campaign to overcome
mistrust in some communities.
Mpox typically causes flu-like symptoms and pus-filled lesions, and
can kill. There were 19,710 suspected cases of mpox reported in
Congo in the first eight months of this year, according to the
health ministry. Of those, 5,041 were confirmed and 655 were fatal.
It spreads through close contact, including sexual contact.
(Reporting by Ange Kasongo, Justin Makangara and Alessandra
Prentice; Writing by Anait Miridzhanian; editing by Philippa
Fletcher)
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