L’Organisation mondiale de la santé a déclaré samedi que l’épidémie de monkeypox, qui a touché près de 16 000 personnes dans 72 pays, était une urgence sanitaire mondiale – la plus haute alarme qu’elle puisse sonner.
« J’ai décidé que l’épidémie mondiale de #monkeypox représente une urgence de santé publique de portée internationale », a déclaré le chef de l’OMS, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, lors d’une conférence de presse.
Il a déclaré qu’un comité d’experts qui s’était réuni jeudi n’était pas parvenu à un consensus, il lui incombait donc de décider s’il devait déclencher l’alerte la plus élevée possible.
« L’évaluation de l’OMS est que le risque de monkeypox est modéré à l’échelle mondiale et dans toutes les régions, sauf dans la région européenne où nous évaluons le risque comme élevé », a-t-il ajouté.
Le monkeypox a touché plus de 15 800 personnes dans 72 pays, selon un décompte des Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) des États-Unis publié le 20 juillet.
Une recrudescence des infections à monkeypox a été signalée depuis début mai en dehors des pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest et du Centre où la maladie est endémique depuis longtemps.
On June 23, the WHO convened an emergency committee (EC) of experts to decide if monkeypox constitutes a so-called Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) — the UN health agency’s highest alert level.
But a majority advised Tedros that the situation, at that point, had not met the threshold.
The second meeting was called on Thursday with case numbers rising further, where Tedros said he was worried.
« I need your advice in assessing the immediate and mid-term public health implications, » Tedros told the meeting, which lasted more than six hours.
A US health expert sounded a grim warning late on Friday.
« Since the last #monkeypox EC just weeks ago, we’ve seen an exponential rise in cases. It’s inevitable that cases will dramatically rise in the coming weeks & months. That’s why @DrTedros must sound the global alarm, » Lawrence Gostin, the director of the WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law, said on Twitter.
« A failure to act will have grave consequences for global health. »
Warning against discrimination
A viral infection resembling smallpox and first detected in humans in 1970, monkeypox is less dangerous and contagious than smallpox, which was eradicated in 1980.
Ninety-five percent of cases have been transmitted through sexual activity, according to a study of 528 people in 16 countries published in the New England Journal of Medicine — the largest research to date.
Overall, 98 percent of infected people were gay or bisexual men, and around a third were known to have visited sex-on-site venues such as sex parties or saunas within the previous month.
« This transmission pattern represents both an opportunity to implement targeted public health interventions, and a challenge because in some countries, the communities affected face life-threatening discrimination, » Tedros said earlier, citing concern that stigma and scapegoating could make the outbreak harder to track.
The European Union’s drug watchdog on Friday recommended for approval the use of Imvanex, a smallpox vaccine, to treat monkeypox.
Imvanex, developed by Danish drugmaker Bavarian Nordic, has been approved in the EU since 2013 for the prevention of smallpox.
It was also considered a potential vaccine for monkeypox because of the similarity between the monkeypox virus and the smallpox virus.
The first symptoms of monkeypox are fever, headaches, muscle pain and back pain during the course of five days.
Rashes subsequently appear on the face, the palms of hands and soles of feet, followed by lesions, spots and finally scabs.