Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
International

WHO to share vaccines to stop monkeypox amid inequity fears

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jun, 2022 10:30 AM
  • WHO to share vaccines to stop monkeypox amid inequity fears

LONDON (AP) — The World Health Organization said it’s creating a new vaccine-sharing mechanism to stop the outbreak of monkeypox in more than 30 countries beyond Africa. The move could result in the U.N. health agency distributing scarce vaccine doses to rich countries that can otherwise afford them.

To some health experts, the initiative potentially misses the opportunity to control monkeypox virus in the African countries where it’s infected people for decades, serving as another example of the inequity in vaccine distribution seen during the coronavirus pandemic .

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the agency is developing an initiative for “fair access” to vaccines and treatments that it hopes will be ready within weeks. The mechanism was proposed shortly after Britain, Canada, France, Germany, the U.S. and other countries reported hundreds of monkeypox cases last month.

WHO has described the outbreak as “unusual” and said the virus' continuing spread was worrying enough to convene its expert committee next week to decide if monkeypox should be declared a global emergency.

Vaccines for smallpox, a related disease, are thought to be about 85% effective against monkeypox. WHO’s Europe director, Dr. Hans Kluge, said Wednesday he was concerned by the scramble by some rich countries to buy more vaccines without talk of buying supplies for Africa.

Kluge urged governments "to approach monkeypox without repeating the mistakes of the pandemic.” Still, he did not discount the possibility that countries like Britain, which currently has the biggest outbreak beyond Africa, might receive vaccines through WHO.

He said the program was being created for all countries and that vaccines would largely be dispensed based on their epidemiological needs.

“Europe remains the epicenter of this escalating outbreak, with 25 countries reporting more than 1,500 cases, or 85% of the global total,” Kluge noted.

Some African experts questioned why the U.N. health agency has never proposed using vaccines in central and West Africa, where the disease is endemic.

“The place to start any vaccination should be Africa and not elsewhere,” Dr. Ahmed Ogwell, acting director of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said.

He said the lack of any vaccines to counter monkeypox on the continent, where more than 1,500 suspected cases and 72 deaths have been reported this year, was a more critical concern than the clusters of mostly mild disease being reported in rich countries.

“This is an extension of the inequity that we saw during COVID,” said Ifeanyi Nsofor, a Nigerian infectious diseases physician and consultant at the communications agency Upswell. “We have had hundreds of monkeypox cases in Nigeria from 2017 until now and we’re just dealing with it on our own,” he said. “Nobody has discussed when there might be vaccines available for Africa.”

After the coronavirus pandemic exploded in 2020, global health agencies rushed to set up COVAX, a U.N.-backed effort to distribute COVID-19 vaccines. But rich countries bought up most of the world’s supply , and the COVAX program missed multiple targets to share doses with the world’s poor.

To date, only about 17% of people in poorer countries have received a single dose of coronavirus vaccine. Some experts fear the same thing could happen with monkeypox.

“Just like with COVID, there is no clear path for how poorer countries will be able to get vaccines,” Brook Baker, a Northeastern University law professor who specializes in access to medicines, said.

He warned that as WHO attempts to determine how many vaccine doses are available, rich countries that previously promised doses might not cooperate.

“Rich countries will protect themselves while people in the global south die,” Baker predicted.

On Monday, advocacy group Public Citizen sent a letter to the White House, asking if the Biden administration would release the 20 million smallpox vaccines the U.S. pledged in 2004 for WHO’s use in the event of an emergency, like a biological attack.

Asked about the commitment, a senior U.S. official said the government was “exploring all options” to further their efforts to stop monkeypox within the U.S. and globally.

The official said the U.S. had returned more than 200,000 doses of a smallpox vaccine to the manufacturer so they would be available to others. The official declined to say if the U.S. considers the current monkeypox outbreak an emergency that warrants the release of the 20 million pledged vaccines.

According to the health data and analytics firm Airfinity, the U.S. has at least 1.4 million doses of vaccine and has ordered another 13 million. To date, the U.S. has reported 72 monkeypox cases.

Francois Balloux, an infectious diseases expert at University College London, said vaccination efforts in rich countries should prompt an overhaul of future monkeypox response strategies in Africa.

“It really should be a priority to vaccinate people in Africa , where there is a nastier strain that has actually killed people,” he said, adding that more monkeypox spillovers were likely in the future.

“Whatever vaccination happens in Europe, that is not going to solve the problem,” Balloux said.

MORE International ARTICLES

Meet Licypriya Kangujam, The 8-Yr-Old Indian 'Greta' Who Is Urging Leaders At COP25 To Save The Planet

Speaking at the COP25 climate conference in Madrid, the young activist from Manipur who has already spoken in 21 countries on climate change, gave the world a glimpse of her resolve as she urged global leaders to "act now against climate change".  

Meet Licypriya Kangujam, The 8-Yr-Old Indian 'Greta' Who Is Urging Leaders At COP25 To Save The Planet

Sikh Couple Not Allowed To Adopt White Kids Due To Race Wins UK Court Battle

The couple tried to get this 2016 decision reversed and even won the support of their local MP, the then home secretary Theresa May.  

Sikh Couple Not Allowed To Adopt White Kids Due To Race Wins UK Court Battle

How An Indian-Origin Doctor In London Misled Patients For Breast, Vaginal Examinations

How An Indian-Origin Doctor In London Misled Patients For Breast, Vaginal Examinations
  Over five years, between May 2009 and June 2013, the 50-year-old doctor assaulted six patients of the Mawney Medical Centre in east London, including some as young as 11.  

How An Indian-Origin Doctor In London Misled Patients For Breast, Vaginal Examinations

Sikh American Uber Driver Racially Abused, Strangled By Passenger In Bellingham, Washington

Sikh American Uber Driver Racially Abused, Strangled By Passenger In Bellingham, Washington
Last week, a religiously observant Sikh American Uber driver and father was physically assaulted and verbally abused by a customer in Bellingham, Washington.

Sikh American Uber Driver Racially Abused, Strangled By Passenger In Bellingham, Washington

‘Pakistan is Taliban’: US Veterans Join Indian-Americans In Protest Against Pakistan

‘Pakistan is Taliban’: US Veterans Join Indian-Americans In Protest Against Pakistan
Raising slogans like “Pakistan is Taliban”, “Pakistan a terror state,” and “Where was (Osama) Bin Laden”, the protestors demanded Pakistan be declared a State Sponsor of terrorism.

‘Pakistan is Taliban’: US Veterans Join Indian-Americans In Protest Against Pakistan

OCI Card Holders Facing Problem While Travelling To India: Indian-American Says In A Petition To The Indian Ambassador

Overseas Citizen of India card holders are facing major problems while travelling to the country because adequate awareness has not been created among the diaspora about recent enforcement of a rule on renewal

OCI Card Holders Facing Problem While Travelling To India: Indian-American Says In A Petition To The Indian Ambassador