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A ticking time bomb

LONDON (AP) – Moves by rich countries to buy large quantities of monkeypox vaccine, while declining to share doses with Africa, could leave millions of people unprotected against a more dangerous version of the disease and risk continued spillovers of the virus into humans, public health officials are warning.

Critics fear a repeat of the catastrophic inequity problems seen during the coronavirus pandemic.

“The mistakes we saw during the COVID-19 pandemic are already being repeated,” said an assistant professor of medicine at Emory University Dr Boghuma Kabisen Titanji.

While rich countries have ordered millions of vaccines to stop monkeypox within their borders, none have announced plans to share doses with Africa, where a more lethal form of monkeypox is spreading than in the West.

To date, there have been more than 22,000 monkeypox cases reported in nearly 80 countries since May, with about 75 suspected deaths in Africa, mostly in Nigeria and Congo.

On Friday, Brazil and Spain reported deaths linked to monkeypox, the first reported outside Africa. Spain reported a second monkeypox death on Saturday.

“The African countries dealing with monkeypox outbreaks for decades have been relegated to a footnote in conversations about the global response,” Dr Titanji said.

Daniel Rofin, 41, receives a vaccine against monkeypox from a health professional in medical centre in Barcelona, Spain. PHOTOS: AP
A pharmacist opens a freezer transport box containing the Jynneos vaccine for monkeypox; and a health professional prepares a dose of a monkeypox vaccine at the Edison municipal vaccination centre in Paris, France

A sign urges the release of the monkeypox vaccine during a protest in San Francisco, United States

Scientists said that, unlike campaigns to stop COVID-19, mass vaccinations against monkeypox won’t be necessary.

They think targetted use of the available doses, along with other measures, could shut down the expanding epidemics that were recently designated by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a global health emergency.

Yet while monkeypox is much harder to spread than COVID-19, experts warn if the disease spills over into general populations – currently in Europe and North America – the need for vaccines could intensify, especially if the virus becomes entrenched in new regions.

On Thursday, the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) called for the continent to be prioritised for vaccines, saying it was again being left behind.

“If we’re not safe, the rest of the world is not safe,” said Africa CDC’s acting director Ahmed Ogwell.

Although monkeypox has been endemic in parts of Africa for decades, it mostly jumps into people from infected wild animals and has not typically spread very far beyond the continent.

Experts suspect the monkeypox outbreaks in North America and Europe may have originated in Africa long before the disease started spreading via sex at two raves in Spain and Belgium.

Currently, more than 70 per cent of the world’s monkeypox cases are in Europe, and 98 per cent are in men.

A senior emergencies officer at WHO Europe Catherine Smallwood said the deaths in Spain did not change the agency’s assessment of the outbreak.

“Although the disease is self-limiting in most cases, monkeypox can cause severe complications,” she said in an email, adding that about eight per cent of infections reported had required hospitalisation and that monkeypox could sometimes lead to life-threatening complications like encephalitis.

“With the continued spread of monkeypox in Europe, we will expect to see more deaths,” Smallwood said.

WHO is developing a vaccine-sharing mechanism for affected countries, but has released few details about how it might work. The United Nations (UN) health agency has made no guarantees about prioritising poor countries in Africa, saying only that vaccines would be dispensed based on epidemiological need.

Some experts worry the mechanism could duplicate the problems seen with COVAX, created by WHO and partners in 2020 to try to ensure poorer countries would get COVID-19 shots.

That missed repeated targets to share vaccines with poorer nations.

“Just asking countries to share is not going to be enough,” said a vaccines adviser for Medecins Sans Frontieres Sharmila Shetty.

“The longer monkeypox circulates, the greater chances it could get into new animal reservoirs or spread to” the human general population, she said.

At the moment, there’s only one producer of the most advanced monkeypox vaccine: the Danish company Bavarian Nordic.

Its production capacity this year is about 30 million doses, with about 16 million vaccines available now.

In May, Bavarian Nordic asked the United States (US) to release more than 215,000 doses it was due to receive “to assist with international requests the company was receiving”, and the US complied, according to spokesman for the department of Health and Human Services Bill Hall.

The US will still receive the doses but at a later date.

The company declined to specify which countries it was allocating doses for.

Hall said the US has not made any other promises to share vaccines. The US has ordered by far the most number of doses, with 13 million reserved, although only about 1.4 million have been delivered.

Some African officials said it would be wise to stockpile some doses on the continent, especially given the difficulties Western countries were having stopping monkeypox.

“I really didn’t think this would spread very far, because monkeypox does not spread like COVID,” said an infectious diseases epidemiologist at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa Salim Abdool Karim.

“Africa should procure some vaccines in case we need them, but we should prioritise diagnostics and surveillance so we know who to target.”

A global health expert at Harvard University Dr Ingrid Katz said the monkeypox epidemics were “potentially manageable” if the limited vaccines were distributed appropriately.

She believed it was still possible to prevent monkeypox from turning into a pandemic but “we need to be thoughtful in our prevention strategies and rapid in our response”.

In Spain, which has Europe’s biggest monkeypox outbreak, the demand for vaccines far exceeds supply.

“There is a real gap between the number of vaccines that we currently have available and the people who could benefit,” said Pep Coll, a medical director at a Barcelona health centre that was dispensing shots this week.

Daniel Rofin, 41, was more than happy to be offered a dose. He said he decided to get vaccinated for the same reasons he was immunided against COVID-19.

“I feel reassured it is a way to stop the spread,” he said.

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