Health leaders warn that the global response to the virus is a test case for equity and preparation for future pandemics.
There were 38,465 cases of mpox and 1,456 deaths in Africa from January 2022 to August 2024, including more than 14,000 cases and 524 deaths in the Democratic Republic of the Congo alone this year.
The World Health Organization said the outbreak was serious enough to declare a “public health emergency of international concern”, the category used in the past for Ebola outbreaks, COVID-19 and a 2022 mpox surge in Europe.
WHO’s emergency declaration is meant to spur donor agencies and countries into action including accelerating access to testing, vaccines and therapeutic drugs in the affected areas and to kickstart campaigns to reduce the stigma surrounding the virus.
The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention also announced that mpox was a public health emergency.
Dr Jean Kaseya, the organisation’s director general, said the declaration was “not merely a formality” but “a clarion call to action” and warranted proactive and aggressive efforts to contain and eliminate the virus.
Nick Dearden, director-general of Global Justice Now, told the Guardian: “mpox has been endemic in a handful of African countries for years. Yet despite having the medicines to treat it, no serious action was taken until the outbreak posed a threat to the west.”
“We saw this same inequity play out during the COVID pandemic, where lives lost in the global south were shamefully treated as collateral damage in pursuit of more and more pharmaceutical profiteering.”