Monkeypox

Hospitals ready for monkeypox cases — DOH

May 27, 2022 People's Tonight 281 views

THE country’s health care system is ready to handle monkeypox virus cases, a health official said Friday.

In a televised public briefing, Health Undersecretary Myrna Cabotaje said the Department of Health (DOH) is working with its stakeholders should the monkeypox virus enter the country.

“The basic infection control is the same. Actually, naka-exercise na tayo with COVID-19,” she said.

Earlier, the DOH said it would implement the four-door strategy the framework of the National Emergency Operational Response Plan to prevent and control emerging infectious diseases to prevent the entry of monkeypox into the country.

It involves the “Prevent, Detect, Isolate, Treat and Reintegrate” approach.

“We were informed by the Bureau of Quarantine, there are no direct flights in the affected areas, so at the point of lay over na-i-screen na,” Cabotaje said.

“Nevertheless, we will have to look at surveillance and other questions for those who may have been coming or who have passed through these areas,” she added.

Observance of minimum public health standards wearing of best-fitted mask, ensuring good airflow, handwashing and physical distancing could prevent monkeypox transmission, health authorities said.

“We are looking also at the probable symptomatic treatment. We coordinate with our global authorities kung ano ang pwede pang gawin for monkeypox control,” Cabotaje said.

Monkeypox can be stopped outside endemic countries: WHO

Meanwhile, fewer than 200 confirmed and suspected cases had been recorded so far, the World Health Organization (WHO) emerging disease lead Maria Van Kerkhove said.

“This is a containable situation, particularly in the countries where we are seeing these outbreaks that are happening across Europe, in North America as well,” Van Kerkhove told a live interaction on the UN health agency’s social media channels.

“We want to stop human-to-human transmission. We can do this in the non-endemic countries,” Van Kerkhove also said.

“We’re in a situation where we can use public health tools of early identification, supported isolation of cases,” Van Kerkhove added. “We can stop human-to-human transmission.”

Van Kerkhove said transmission was happening via “close physical contact: skin-to-skin contact” and that most of the people identified so far had not had a severe case of the disease.

Rosamund Lewis, who heads the smallpox secretariat on the WHO emergencies programme, said monkeypox had been known for at least 40 years and a few cases had appeared in Europe over the last five years in travellers from the endemic regions.

However, “this is the first time we’re seeing cases across many countries at the same time and people who have not travelled to the endemic regions in Africa,” she said.

She cited Nigeria, Cameroon, the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

“It is primarily in the animal kingdom in forested areas. Now we’re seeing it more in urban areas,” she said.

Mutation studies

Lewis said it was not yet known whether the virus had mutated but viruses in the wider orthopoxvirus group “tend not to mutate and they tend to be fairly stable.”

“We don’t yet have evidence yet that there is mutation in the virus itself,” she said. Virologists will be studying the first genomic sequences of the virus coming through, she added.

Van Kerkhove said a major global meeting next week would discuss research, epidemiology, diagnostics, therapeutics and vaccines.

Andy Seale, strategies advisor at the WHO’s global HIV, hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections programmes, stressed that while the virus could be caught through sexual activity, it was not a sexually transmitted disease.

“While we are seeing some cases amongst men who have sex with men, this is not a gay disease, as some people in social media have attempted to label it. That’s just not the case,” Seale said.

“Anybody can contract monkeypox through close contact.”

Van Kerkhove also said as surveillance widened, experts did expect to see more cases. Philippine News Agency

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