
(MENAFN– Newsroom Panama)
AFP- Montreal – Canada – Monkeypox, first detected in Quebec, Canada on May 20 has spread to 77 people a situation considered ‘worrying’, explained Dr. Howard Njoo, deputy chief administrator of the Canadian federal public health agency, during a press conference Authorities fear in particular ‘that cases will run in families and affect pregnant women or young children,’ he added.
Njoo also clarified that the spread is ‘not (limited) to any particular group or setting’ and therefore can affect ‘anyone, regardless of gender identity or sexual orientation.’
In that sense, smallpox vaccines were delivered to the province. They can be effective in protecting against contact cases because there is no specific cure for monkeypox, which usually clears up on its own.
Monkeypox is primarily a mild disease, but its spread outside endemic areas, such as West Africa, remains a concern.
Since the current peak of cases began almost a month ago, 550 cases have been reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) in 30 countries, mainly European, where the disease is not endemic and is detected very rarely.
This infectious disease is characterized by the appearance of rashes, which can be painful, especially if they affect sensitive areas like the genitals.
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