
The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has revealed the absence of monkeypox vaccine in the country.
The agency
stated this in response to concerns that the ongoing monkeypox pandemic might
become more fatal, as vaccines, treatments and tests are unavailable in much of
the world, especially Africa.
A report
published, last week, by The New York Times showed that African countries don’t
have monkeypox vaccines, treatments and tests.
But on
Sunday, September 18, the Director General, NCDC, Dr. Ifedayo Adetifa, said:
“The NCDC has testing and genomic sequencing capacity for monkeypox at our
National Reference Laboratory (NRL), Abuja. Monkeypox diagnostic capacity is also
being rolled out at Central Public Health Laboratory, Lagos, a campus of the
NRL, as a first step to increasing access to testing, given a large number of
cases in 2022.
“There are
currently no vaccines available in the country. But official requests have been
made to the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the United States for available
vaccines (second or third generation).”
“Monkeypox
is a self-limiting disease, which has been primarily managed in Nigeria through
supportive treatment; meaning the symptoms are treated in the patients. We have
identified a few patient groups at very high risk for severe disease,
hospitalisation and death. As a result, NCDC is looking into procuring the only
medication licensed for monkeypox treatment, Tecovirimat (TPOXX), for high-risk
groups (immunosuppressed patients).”
On
implications of the absence of vaccines and treatment for monkeypox in Nigeria
and indeed Africa, Adetifa said NCDC’s
priority is to procure a therapeutic option to offer those at high risk of
severe symptoms, hospitalisation and death, given its local epidemiology and
experience.
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