mpox in india – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Tue, 27 Aug 2024 18:34:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png mpox in india – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 WHO Says Droplets A Minor Route Of Mpox Spread. What We Know So Far https://artifex.news/who-says-droplets-a-minor-route-of-mpox-spread-what-we-know-so-far-6432134/ Tue, 27 Aug 2024 18:34:18 +0000 https://artifex.news/who-says-droplets-a-minor-route-of-mpox-spread-what-we-know-so-far-6432134/ Read More “WHO Says Droplets A Minor Route Of Mpox Spread. What We Know So Far” »

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Mpox has symptoms similar to smallpox, although less severe, according to WHO. (File)

New Delhi:

The World Health Organization (WHO) said today that droplets were a “minor” route of transmission for mpox compared to physical contact, adding that more research is required to understand how the virus spreads.

The UN health agency declared mpox a public health emergency of international concern on August 14 amid a surge of cases across the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and its neighbouring countries.

Mainly, two distinct clades of the virus, Ia and Ib, are causing significant concern in the DRC. A third variant, Clade II, originated in Nigeria and has been responsible for the global outbreak that began in 2022.

What is Mpox?

The mpox virus is an orthopoxvirus that causes mpox (monkeypox), a disease with symptoms similar to smallpox, although less severe, according to the WHO website. 

What are the symptoms of Mpox?

  1. Fever
  2. Extensive characteristic rash 
  3. Swollen lymph nodes
  4. Headache
  5. Back pain and muscle ache
  6. Lack of energy

The incubation period of mpox can range from 5 to 21 days. The febrile stage of illness (when fever persists) usually lasts 1 to 3 days, according to WHO. This is followed by the skin eruption stage, which can last for 2 to 4 weeks.

How does Mpox spread?

WHO has said that mpox spreads between people mainly through close physical contact with someone who has the virus. “Close contact includes skin-to-skin (such as touching or sex) and mouth-to-mouth, or mouth-to-skin contact (such as kissing),” it said.

However, WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris said today that if a person with the virus had lesions, “if you’re talking closely to someone, breathing on them, physically close, face-to-face, there is a possibility” of viral spread, “but this is a minor source”.

“When you’re talking to somebody, you’re spitting out droplets,” but “it’s not a very major form of transmission — and it’s not a… through-the-air, long-distance sort of transmission,” she added.

The WHO recommends the use of facemasks for those with mpox, their close contacts and health workers treating them.

Does mpox have a vaccine?

Yes, there are vaccines recommended by WHO for use against mpox. However, only people who are at risk should get the vaccine. WHO has not recommended mass vaccination against mpox.

How has India prepared for a possible mpox outbreak?

India currently has no active mpox cases. The government had ordered the authorities in airports, ports and borders with Bangladesh and Pakistan to remain alert about incoming international passengers who show mpox symptoms.

The All India Institute for Medical Sciences (AIIMS) had issued protocols for handling suspected mpox cases in India. Various government hospitals were directed to set up isolation rooms for suspected and confirmed cases of mpox.

The institute has recommended setting up a screening process in the triage area wherein, upon arrival, patients with fever, rash, or a history of contact with confirmed mpox cases should be flagged for immediate assessment.

According to an assessment, the risk of a large outbreak with sustained transmission is low, officials had said.
 

(With inputs from AFP)

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Mpox outbreak, first neglected in Africa, could now turn into the next global pandemic https://artifex.news/article68535601-ece/ Sat, 17 Aug 2024 06:17:56 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68535601-ece/ Read More “Mpox outbreak, first neglected in Africa, could now turn into the next global pandemic” »

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The mpox outbreak in Africa is yet another example of how infectious diseases perceived to be “someone else’s problem”, and affecting mainly poor, developing countries, may suddenly pose unexpected global threats.

Mpox was discovered in 1958 (in captive monkeys, hence the original misnomer “monkeypox”) and the first human case was identified in 1970. Then for decades it was largely neglected by the scientific and public health communities, regarded as an uncommon infection in remote rural areas in tropical Africa without relevance for the rest of the world.

When a massive mpox outbreak hit developed countries in 2022, increased research funding led to a surge in scientific studies. On just one medical search engine, there’s been more research produced since April 2022 than in the preceding 60 years.

The 2022-23 global mpox outbreak happened despite repeated calls from African researchers for increased global investment in diagnostic, therapeutic and infection prevention tools for mpox.

The WHO has now declared the current upsurge of mpox in central Africa a public health emergency of international concern.

This is the highest alert level for events that constitute a public health risk to other countries and requires a coordinated international response.

We are infectious disease researchers who have worked on HIV, SARS-CoV-2 and other viral infections.

Mpox’s recent history is yet another reminder that an infectious disease in one corner of the world should not be regarded as someone else’s problem, as it can suddenly start to spread fast and far.

It also highlights global inequities in resource allocation and access to vaccines, diagnostics and treatments. These were made available in many industrialised countries and helped curb the global outbreak, but are still largely lacking in most of Africa.

The 2022 outbreak: a total surprise

The disease has been renamed “mpox” but the name of the virus, for now, remains “monkeypox” (MPXV). It is closely related to the smallpox virus.

MPXV was considered a zoonotic disease endemic in parts of central and west Africa. It was acquired mainly through close contact with wild mammals, especially handling bush meat, but there was no sustained human-to-human transmission.

Only very occasionally were cases seen outside the endemic areas, due to infected travellers or import of infected small mammals.

This changed abruptly in 2022 when a massive, rapidly evolving global outbreak caused over 99,000 laboratory-confirmed cases in 116 countries. At its peak in August 2022, over 6,000 cases were reported each week.

This outbreak came as a total surprise as most cases were reported from non-endemic countries, mostly in men who have sex with men who had become infected during recent sexual encounters.

Even though most cases were clinically not particularly severe and the death toll stands at just over 200, the global outbreak was declared a public health emergency of international concern by the World Health Organization on 23 July 2022.

Fortunately, case numbers soon plummeted due to a combination of behavioural changes and vaccination in at-risk groups.

Modern vaccines and antiviral drugs with activity against mpox were made available in many affected high-income countries.

These had been developed and stockpiled in the U.S. and Europe, mostly in preparation for a potential bioweapon attack using a poxvirus.

The global outbreak in 2022 was caused by clade II of MPXV, which is endemic in west Africa and not as virulent as clade I MPXV, which so far has only been seen in the Congo Basin. That first mpox public health emergency of international concern was declared in May 2023.

Upsurge in Africa

The African region is experiencing an upsurge in mpox cases which started in 2023.

As the continent which includes the areas where mpox has been endemic for a long time, Africa now presents a complex mosaic, cases arising from the endemic, largely zoonotic, pattern that used to be predominant in the past cases linked to the 2022 global outbreak, for example in South Africa. Most worryingly, ever increasing numbers of MPXV clade Ib infections reported from the Democratic Republic of Congo.

New, more dangerous strain The current clade I MPXV (formerly called Congo Basin strain) is more virulent than the clade II (west African) strain, resulting in a higher case fatality rate.

The ongoing outbreak has its epicentre in South Kivu province, eastern DRC, and has the potential to fuel a large pandemic.

It has a distinct epidemiological pattern with sustained chains of human-to-human transmission, often via the sexual route.

The virus which causes it is the newly defined clade Ib lineage. It displays mutations that are the hallmark of human-to-human spread that is estimated to have been happening since September 2023.

Case numbers are rising rapidly, even though many suspected cases are likely not tested and thus not counted as confirmed. Complicating matters, a commonly used test was found to miss infections with this lineage of the virus. It affects mostly adults. The case fatality rate is higher than it was in the 2022 global outbreak.

Already, this outbreak has resulted in mpox cases occurring in several neighbouring countries, including some (like Kenya) with no previous record of mpox.

The challenge is enormous. The eastern DRC is an area beset by multiple problems. This includes natural disasters, violence and infectious diseases including measles, cholera and poliomyelitis for the DRC.

In recent years the second-largest Ebola outbreak ever took place in the wider area and, despite the availability of vaccines and treatments, posed considerable challenges.



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