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Africa CDC says renaming of monkeypox variants curbs stigma

Vials of empty monkeypox vaccines sit at a table at Seattle Central College in Seattle, Saturday, Aug. 6, 2022. (Daniel Kim/The Seattle Times via AP) Vials of empty monkeypox vaccines sit at a table at Seattle Central College in Seattle, Saturday, Aug. 6, 2022. (Daniel Kim/The Seattle Times via AP)
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KAMPALA, Uganda -

The head of Africa's public health agency says he's "really pleased" that the World Health Organization is renaming the strains of the monkeypox disease to remove references to African regions amid concerns about stigmatization.

The variant of the disease formerly known as the Congo Basin is now called Clade 1 and what was previously known as the West Africa clade is now called Clade 2, the UN health agency announced last week, saying it will hold an open forum to rename monkeypox altogether.

"We are very glad that now we can be able to call them Clade 1 and Clade 2 rather than make reference to these variants using African regions," Ahmed Ogwell, acting director of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said at a briefing Thursday. "We are really pleased with that change in naming, which will remove stigma from disease-causing variants."

More monkeypox deaths have been reported on the African continent this year than anywhere in the world. A total of 3,232 cases, including 105 deaths, have been reported in Africa, although only a fraction have been confirmed because the continent lacks enough diagnostic resources.

At least 285 new cases have been reported since the agency's last briefing a week ago, Ogwell said, adding that the West African nations of Ghana and Nigeria are reporting 90% of new cases. Liberia, Republic of Congo and South Africa are the other nations reporting new cases.

Ogwell, who urged the international community to help Africa's 54 countries improve their capacity to test for monkeypox and control its spread, said he had no epidemiological insights to share regarding the spread of monkeypox in Africa.

But he noted that while 98% of cases are in men who have sex with men outside Africa, what's happening on the continent of 1.3 billion people "does not reflect what other parts of the world are seeing."

"Our focus is capacity-building so that each and every country that is at risk is ready to be able to identify these cases quickly," he said.

Other scientists, however, have dismissed the effort to rename monkeypox as an unnecessary distraction as the global outbreak continues.

Oyewale Tomori, a Nigerian virologist who sits on various World Health Organization advisory groups, said he didn't see the point of renaming monkeypox.

"All the other pox viruses are named after animals," he said, citing cowpox, sheeppox and rabbitpox as examples. "If we start renaming diseases, where does it end? Do we rename Lassa fever and Marburg virus? What about Spanish flu?" Tomori asked. Lassa fever is named after the Nigerian town where the disease was first identified and Marburg was also named after the German city where scientists first identified the severe hemorrhagic fever.

WHO has said it does not plan to rename any other diseases at the moment.

WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib said this week that it is "important to involve as many audiences, as many people as possible" to suggest names. "I'm sure we will not come up with a ridiculous name," she said. "(It's) the responsibility of WHO to rename diseases when they are stigmatizing. But for the time being, the plan is for (renaming) monkeypox."

Monkeypox spread typically requires skin-to-skin or skin-to-mouth contact with an infected patient's lesions. People can also be infected through contact with the clothing or bedsheets of someone who has monkeypox lesions.

Most people infected with monkeypox recover without treatment, but it can cause more severe symptoms like brain inflammation and in rare cases, death.

The variant of monkeypox spreading in Europe and North America has a lower fatality rate than the one circulating in Africa, where people have mostly been sickened after contact with infected wild animals like rodents and squirrels.

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AP journalists Maria Cheng in London and Frank Jordans in Berlin contributed.

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