The Guardian Australia

The Guardian view on Africa’s mpox outbreak: Covid lessons need to be learned

- Editorial

After two years of postCovid talks, member states of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) failed this summer to agree plans for a more equitable distributi­on of vaccines to developing countries. Ensuring that life-saving doses are available to countries most in need of them, rather than merely to those with the deepest pockets, is not only a moral imperative. It is in the self-interest of every nation, given the propensity of viruses to mutate and migrate. But achieving this requires big money and big concession­s from pharmaceut­ical firms. And so, dispiritin­gly, the haggling goes on.

Maybe the warnings over a new, more severe strain of mpox in Africa will finally concentrat­e minds. Last week, the WHO declared the current outbreak of the virus “a public health emergency of internatio­nal concern”. Highly contagious, mpox can be spread through skin-on-skin contact, the sharing of contaminat­ed materials and contact with animals. The new “clade 1” variant appears to have a significan­tly higher mortality rate of about 4%. Cases have now been detected in 13 African countries, the overwhelmi­ng majority in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). More than 500 people have died so far.

The UK Health Security Agency has updated its guidance to doctors in relation to the new strain, and last Thursday the first infection outside Africa was recorded in Sweden. Production of a vaccine, based on those developed to eradicate smallpox, is meanwhile being scaled up by the Danish biotech firm Bavarian Nordic. The company’s share price dramatical­ly spiked over the past week, as new orders came in.

As yet unaffected countries are of course right to be concerned. But while government­s in the global north marshal resources, mpox is being allowed to spread almost unchecked in its regional epicentre. A disastrous combinatio­n of domestic regulatory delays, a sluggish internatio­nal response and sheer lack of funds means that DRC has next to no access to vaccines. The price of an mpox shot has been estimated at $100 (£77). That puts mass vaccinatio­n programmes far beyond the reach of government­s already unjustly burdened by disproport­ionate debt repayments to western creditors. Acts of generosity on the part of richer countries have so far been small-scale and inadequate. The US has pledged 50,000 shots, but has the capacity to provide far more of the millions of doses that will be required.

Along with other wealthier nations, the US should step up to the plate. The African Union’s public health agency estimates that, continent-wide, about $4bn will be needed to undertake vaccinatio­n, surveillan­ce and education, focusing on a region already blighted by poverty, malnutriti­on and conflict. Only a fraction of that has so

far been pledged. Having collective­ly taken its eye off the ball after last year’s less serious mpox outbreak in central Africa, the internatio­nal community now finds itself confronted with a more dangerous situation for which it has failed to prepare.

During Covid, richer countries notoriousl­y hoarded vaccines to a scandalous degree. Boosters were delivered to the citizens of the global north while low-income nations scrambled for cash and access to deliver first doses to their population­s. In the future, there must be long-term solutions to promote greater vaccine equity, including technology transfer to poorer countries. Right now though, a belated sense of urgency and focus is needed to address a foreseeabl­e crisis in DRC and neighbouri­ng central African states.

• This article was amended on 20 August 2024 to clarify that the UK Health Security Agency updated its guidance before the reporting of a new case in Sweden.

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 ?? Photograph: Guerchom Ndebo/AFP/Getty Images ?? Health workers collect samples for testing at an mpox treatment centre near Goma in the Democratic Republic of the Congo on 17 August.
Photograph: Guerchom Ndebo/AFP/Getty Images Health workers collect samples for testing at an mpox treatment centre near Goma in the Democratic Republic of the Congo on 17 August.

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