WHO convenes emergency committee over monkeypox

Geneva, Jun. 15, (dpa/GNA) - Concerned about the rising number of monkeypox cases around the world, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has convened the body’s emergency committee for next week.

The committee is to decide whether it is a “public health emergency of international concern” (PHEIC), as was the case with the coronavirus.

The emergency committee is scheduled to meet on June 23, according to a statement from the World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday.

The declaration of a health emergency is the highest alert level that the WHO can impose. Such a declaration has no direct practical consequences, but is intended to spur member countries to act.

An emergency has been in effect since the end of January 2020 because of the coronavirus.

By Tuesday, more than 1,600 cases of monkeypox and almost 1,500 suspected cases had been reported to the WHO this year from 39 countries worldwide.

In 32 of these countries, there were no known cases before May. In the other seven countries in Africa, the virus has been rampant for decades. So far, 72 deaths have been reported from African countries this year. The WHO is investigating a possible monkeypox death from Brazil, Tedros said.

The WHO’s concern is threefold, Tedros said: the virus is behaving unusually, more and more countries are affected and therefore a coordinated response is needed. Tedros stressed, however, that experts on the emergency committee were looking at the problem and had not yet decided whether they thought it was necessary to declare an emergency.

“We don’t want to wait until the situation is out of control,” said WHO specialist Ibrahima Socé Fall.

The committee brings together experts who are particularly knowledgeable about the disease. They can best advise the WHO on what measures to take, Fall said.

WHO specialist Rosamund Lewis stressed that WHO has already provided member countries with a lot of technical advice on how to deal with monkeypox cases. “It is most important to raise awareness that allows people to understand their own level of risk,” Lewis said.

GNA

WHO convenes emergency committee over monkeypox

Geneva, Jun. 15, (dpa/GNA) - Concerned about the rising number of monkeypox cases around the world, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has convened the body’s emergency committee for next week.

The committee is to decide whether it is a “public health emergency of international concern” (PHEIC), as was the case with the coronavirus.

The emergency committee is scheduled to meet on June 23, according to a statement from the World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday.

The declaration of a health emergency is the highest alert level that the WHO can impose. Such a declaration has no direct practical consequences, but is intended to spur member countries to act.

An emergency has been in effect since the end of January 2020 because of the coronavirus.

By Tuesday, more than 1,600 cases of monkeypox and almost 1,500 suspected cases had been reported to the WHO this year from 39 countries worldwide.

In 32 of these countries, there were no known cases before May. In the other seven countries in Africa, the virus has been rampant for decades. So far, 72 deaths have been reported from African countries this year. The WHO is investigating a possible monkeypox death from Brazil, Tedros said.

The WHO’s concern is threefold, Tedros said: the virus is behaving unusually, more and more countries are affected and therefore a coordinated response is needed. Tedros stressed, however, that experts on the emergency committee were looking at the problem and had not yet decided whether they thought it was necessary to declare an emergency.

“We don’t want to wait until the situation is out of control,” said WHO specialist Ibrahima Socé Fall.

The committee brings together experts who are particularly knowledgeable about the disease. They can best advise the WHO on what measures to take, Fall said.

WHO specialist Rosamund Lewis stressed that WHO has already provided member countries with a lot of technical advice on how to deal with monkeypox cases. “It is most important to raise awareness that allows people to understand their own level of risk,” Lewis said.

GNA