Friday, March 29

Monkeypox: WHO chief advises at-risk men to reduce number of sexual partners | World Health Organization


The head of the World Health Organization has advised men at risk of catching monkeypox to consider reducing how many sexual partners they have “for the moment”, after the UN agency declared escalating outbreaks in multiple countries to be a global emergency.

The WHO director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said 98% of the monkeypox cases detected since the outbreaks emerged in May had been among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men. He called for those at risk to take steps to protect themselves.

“That means making safe choices for yourself and others, for men who have sex with men,” Tedros said. “This includes, for the moment, reducing your number of sexual partners.”

Infectious individuals should isolate and avoid gatherings involving close physical contact, while people should get contact details for any new sexual partners in case they needed to follow up later, the WHO chief said.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has not suggested that men who have sex with men reduce their sexual partners, only that they avoid skin-to-skin contact with people who have a rash that could be monkeypox.

WHO officials emphasized that monkeypox could infect anyone in close contact with a patient or their contaminated clothing or bedsheets. The health agency has warned the disease could be more severe in vulnerable populations such as among children or pregnant women.

More than 19,000 cases have been reported in more than 75 countries; deaths have only been reported in Africa.

“We know very clearly that one of the main modes of exposure for this particular illness is through direct contact, close contact, skin-to-skin contact, possibly even face-to-face contact, exposure to droplets or viruses that may be in the mouth,” Dr Rosamund Lewis, the WHO technical lead for monkeypox, said.

Andy Seale, a WHO adviser on HIV, hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections, said experts had determined the monkeypox outbreak was “clearly transmitted during sex”, but he said they had not yet concluded whether or not it was a sexually transmitted infection.

Seale stressed that the messaging around the need for gay and bisexual men to reduce their number of sexual partners was “coming from the communities themselves”. But he said this was possibly only “a short-term message as we hope that the outbreak of course will be short-lived”.

Dr Hugh Adler, who treats monkeypox patients in the UK, said the virus was being transmitted during sex and that sexual networks and anonymous sex with untraceable partners were facilitating its spread. “It’s just as likely that monkeypox was always capable of transmitting and presenting like this, but it hadn’t been formally reported or so widespread before,” he said.

Last week British authorities issued new guidance advising doctors that people with just one or two lesions might be infectious with monkeypox, potentially complicating efforts to stop transmission.

The European Union health commissioner urged the bloc’s 27 member nations on Wednesday to step up their efforts to tackle outbreaks in the EU, which she called “the epicenter of detected cases”.

In a letter to European health ministers obtained by the Associated Press, Stella Kyriakides called for “reinforced, concerted and coordinated action”. “There is no time for complacency and we need to continue working together to control the outbreak,” she wrote.


www.theguardian.com

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