WASHINGTON, June 29, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - US health authorities said Tuesday they
were immediately releasing 56,000 doses of monkeypox vaccine -- five times
the number distributed so far -- to areas of high transmission as part of a
major escalation of the country's immunization strategy.
Until now, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) only
recommended monkeypox vaccines be offered to those who had confirmed
exposures.
"But now, we are recommending that vaccines be provided to both people with
known monkeypox exposures who are contacted by public health, and also to
those people who've been recently exposed to monkeypox that may not be
identified through case investigations and contact tracing," CDC Director
Rochelle Walensky said in a briefing.
Examples include men who have sex with men (MSM) who have recently had
multiple sex partners in a venue where there was known to be monkeypox or in
an area where monkeypox is spreading.
Walensky said that 4,700 cases have been detected globally during the current
outbreak that began in early May, including 306 in the United States that
have all been non-fatal.
Monkeypox is a viral illness endemic in West and Central African countries
that causes symptoms such as fever and rash. It is similar to but less severe
than smallpox, but can be riskier in immune compromised people. It is
primarily spread through close contact.
David Boucher, an official with the Health and Human Services department said
the federal government had so far distributed nearly 10,000 doses and 300
antiviral courses, and was Tuesday releasing a further 56,000 doses of the
JYNNEOS vaccine, originally developed against smallpox.
JYNNEOS is a two dose vaccine given 28 days apart and takes full effect two
weeks after the second dose.
The government is securing an additional 240,000 doses in the coming weeks,
and expects to have a total of 1.6 million doses available this year.
Jurisdictions can also order shipments of the older generation ACAM2000
vaccine, which is in much greater supply, but is not recommended for everyone
because of significant side effects.
Observers have said the true number of monkeypox cases in the United States
is likely to be far higher than the official figure, and part of the new
strategy is making testing more widely available and easier to access.
The CDC has now scaled testing to 78 sites in 48 states, "with spare capacity
to conduct nearly 10,000 tests per week nationwide," a fact sheet said.