• Monkeypox still global health emergency: WHO

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    The World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Tuesday that its emergency committee had determined that monkeypox should continue to be classified
    as a global health emergency.

    Following a meeting on October 20 about the virus that suddenly started spreading across the world in May, the experts “held the consensus view
    that the event continues to meet the … criteria for a Public Health
    Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC)”, WHO said in a statement.

    The UN health agency first declared the so-called PHEIC — its highest
    level of alarm — on July 23, and the experts said that while some progress
    had been made in reining in the disease, it was too soon to declare the emergency over.

    WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus had accepted and agreed with the
    experts’ advice, the statement said.

    Since monkeypox suddenly began spreading beyond the West African countries where it has long been endemic six months ago, it has killed 36 people out
    of more than 77,000 cases across 109 countries, according to a WHO count.

    The outbreak outside of West Africa has primarily affected young men who
    have sex with men.

    But since peaking in July, the number of people infected with the disease
    that causes fever, muscular aches and large boil-like skin lesions, has consistently fallen, particularly in Europe and North America, the hardest
    hit areas in the early stages of the global outbreak.

    The number of new global cases fell by 41 per cent in the seven days up to Monday compared to the previous week, the WHO said.

    But WHO’s emergency committee stressed that there were a number of
    lingering causes for concern.

    They listed ongoing transmission in some regions, continuing preparedness
    and response inequity within and between countries, and the potential for greater health impacts if the virus begins spreading more among more
    vulnerable populations.

    They also pointed to the continuing risk of stigma and discrimination,
    weak health systems in some developing countries leading to under-
    reporting and the lack of equitable access to diagnostics, antivirals and vaccines.

    https://www.dawn.com/news/1718272/monkeypox-still-global-health-emergency-
    who

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