Monkeypox Declared National Public Health Emergency

monkeypoxPress release from U.S. Department of Health and Human Services:

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra announced [yesterday] that he will declare the ongoing spread of monkeypox virus in the United States a Public Health Emergency (PHE).  This action will further strengthen and accelerate the Biden-Harris Administration’s response in recognition of the continued rapid transmission of monkeypox in the U.S. and globally, and to signal the seriousness and urgency with which the Administration is responding. The announcement comes on the heels of President Biden appointing Robert Fenton of the Federal Emergency Management Agency as White House National Monkeypox Response Coordinator and Dr. Demetre Daskalakis of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as White House National Monkeypox Response Deputy Coordinator.

“Ending the monkeypox outbreak is a critical priority for the Biden-Harris Administration. We are taking our response to the next level by declaring a public health emergency,” said Secretary Becerra. “With today’s declaration we can further strengthen and accelerate our response further.”

“President Biden has called on us to explore every option on the table to combat the monkeypox outbreak and protect communities at risk,” said White House National Monkeypox Response Coordinator Robert Fenton. “We are applying lessons learned from the battles we’ve fought – from COVID response to wildfires to measles, and will tackle this outbreak with the urgency this moment demands.”

The PHE declaration is in concert with the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) work to explore new strategies that could help get vaccines to affected communities across the country, including using new dose-sparing approach that could increase the number of doses available, up to five-fold.

The public health emergency also carries important implications for data sharing with the federal government. Fifty-one jurisdictions have already signed data use agreements that will provide the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) with information related to vaccine administration. Declaring the outbreak an emergency may provide the justification that the remaining jurisdictions need to sign their agreements. Additionally, it provides authorities to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to collect testing and hospitalization data.

As of today, HHS has shipped more than 602,000 doses of the JYNNEOS vaccine to states and jurisdictions, an increase of 266,000 in the past week. HHS has allocated 1.1 million doses to states and jurisdictions in total and is making more doses available as jurisdictions use their current supply. HHS also announced today that it has accelerated the delivery of an additional 150,000 doses to arrive in the U.S. next month. The doses, which were slated to arrive in November will now arrive in the U.S. in September.

Today’s announcements are part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s comprehensive strategy to combat the monkeypox outbreak.  The strategy includes significantly scaling the production and availability of vaccines, expanding testing capacity and making testing more convenient, reducing burdens in accessing treatments, and conducting robust outreach to stakeholders and members of the LGBTQI+ communities.

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Guest
Guest
Guest
1 year ago

The PHE declaration is in concert with the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) work to explore new strategies that could help get vaccines to affected communities across the country, including using new dose-sparing approach that could increase the number of doses available, up to five-fold.

Yeah, reducing the dosage by 80%, thereby turning 1 dose, into 5 doses…

Either they were planning on giving too much to begin with, or they’re planning on not giving enough with the new plan…

HotCoffee
Guest
HotCoffee
1 year ago
Reply to  Guest

Are these the expired vaccines spoken of earlier that are being divided?
If so, That’s just nuts!

Last edited 1 year ago
Guest
Guest
Guest
1 year ago
Reply to  HotCoffee

Probably not. But yes, that would be nuts.

Well, more nuts.

It’s the vaccine companies that will be testing the expired vaccine to test it’s efficacy.

Of course it will not pass muster, out with the old, and in with the new…

Whatever is most profitable.

Nooo
Guest
Nooo
1 year ago
Reply to  Guest

Intradermal injections take more training to give correctly and tends to cause more visible skin irritation and itching. So that if a two dose intial injection is required, an increased percentage of people will not return for the second dose as a result. And in some groups of people, the higher amount injected intermuscularly got a better response. So “too much” is too simplistic an interpretation.

Guest
Guest
Guest
1 year ago
Reply to  Nooo

So your saying it’s a bad idea?

Or not?

Not enough?

And yes, I’ve gotten a TB test, so I concur, It takes quite a bit more skill to do an intradermal injection than it takes to do a subcutaneous injection.

And if it’s just as effective to inject 80% less vaccine, by volume, (which I suspect is total bullshit), then yes, injecting 5 times as much, for only the sake of the simplicity of the way it’s injected, is too much. That’s just laziness.

If injecting 1/5th the amount of vaccine, intradermally, due to inadequate supply, is in order to stretch the supply by 5 times, because that will be “good enough”, then obviously, it’s not enough.

I was impressed with the skill, dexterity, and patience it took the healthcare nurse to do the Tb intradermal injection.

Although nearly painless, the needle remains embedded in the recipient, for an extended amount of time…

You are right, people won’t like it.

Those will not all go so well, as the skill required to do it right, will not be conducive to a high enough success rate.

And if the intradermal method is the most appropriate way of giving a monkeypox vaccination, there is absolutely no excuse to give five times as much vaccine by volume, subcutaneously, just for simplicity’s sake.

Do it right, either way, or don’t do it at all!

It’s either too much, or it’s not enough, one way or the other.

I’m not budging on that one.

Because it’s obvious.

They might stretch the supply, but it will cost them their credibility.

But if they are unprepared, they have no credibility.

The Great Fauci has let another outbreak spread out of control.

I see a pattern forming…

Nooo
Guest
Nooo
1 year ago
Reply to  Guest

Making up stupid ideas then claiming they are someone else’s is a very bad way to discuss anything.

Guest
Guest
Guest
1 year ago
Reply to  Nooo

So quit doing it.

Saying someone’s explanation is “too simplistic”, or that they are “making up stupid ideas”, is not a bad way to discuss things, as long as it’s you that is doing it?

Check yourself, first.

“Dose sparing” wasn’t my idea.

I just brought it to your attention.

Or you wouldn’t have it to chime in on.

Maybe actually provide information, as well as critique?

You said ‘too much” was “too simplistic”.

So how about “not enough”?

You didn’t cover that.

And you said something about a “two dose initial injection”…is that “too simplistic”?

Yep.

Could you be referring to a “two dose primary series”?

Let’s not be “too confusing”.

local observer
Guest
local observer
1 year ago
Reply to  Guest

i also see a pattern forming. we need to seriously fund education so another GenX of idiocracy doesn’t occur.

Corporate Serfdom
Guest
Corporate Serfdom
1 year ago
Reply to  local observer

If you are aware of the plan, everything makes sense .

The attempt to create and control mass amounts of death that can be explained by history as a pathogen that wiped out civilization.

There are too many distractions, that makes it difficult to see the pattern for what it is.

You can feel better knowing your betters are doing it for the environment .

WTF?
Guest
WTF?
1 year ago

Why doesn’t the press release explain anything about Monkeypox? Like symptoms, how to avoid getting it, how to keep your immune system healthy. None of the articles on it that I’ve looked at explain anything about it, just that it’s spreading fast, it’s an emergency, and there aren’t enough vaccines. Seems like a lot of alarm is being raised but without any education on the topic.

I like stars
Guest
I like stars
1 year ago
Reply to  WTF?

You are correct that there has not been enough focus on how to avoid monkeypox. Everything I have read indicates that monogamy would essentially eliminate the spread of the disease.

thetallone
Guest
thetallone
1 year ago
Reply to  I like stars

Right. All that’s needed is to change thousands of years of human nature.

Guest
Guest
Guest
1 year ago
Reply to  WTF?

Job security.

Lone Ranger
Guest
Lone Ranger
1 year ago

Biden? Crack me up, he is still high centered on the corona.

Al L Ivesmatr
Guest
Al L Ivesmatr
1 year ago

Here we go again, right on time for the upcoming elections in the fall. Never let a crisis go to waste – the democrats pounce. It is all becoming so obvious to even the most naive Americans.

guest
Guest
guest
1 year ago

Men who have anonymous sex with other men are at risk of monkeypox. It might be a good time for gay activists to talk to their community about sex addiction. Down low bi-men are also at risk bringing the pox home to their unsuspecting partners and families from anonymous sex with men.

But any criticism of behaviors and acts is considered shaming so instead of addressing the problem of men spreading the pox around we get this misfired message.

Meanwhile, I keep seeing health officials shoot themselves in the foot and say that monkeypox is airborne. The gay community has learned nothing from the 80s and 90s. Any criticism of behaviors is shaming and and monkeypox is airborne! The SF AIDS Foundation is recommending that sores and bumps be covered with a band aid on their website. Just cover it up and carry on.

HotCoffee
Guest
HotCoffee
1 year ago
Reply to  guest

Reported STDs Reach All-time High for 6th Consecutive Year

More than 2.5 million cases of chlamydia, gonorrhea & syphilis reported in 2019
Press Release

For Immediate Release: Tuesday, April 13, 2021

The newly released 2019 STD Surveillance Report found:

  • 2.5 million reported cases of chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis, the three most commonly reported STDs in 2019.
  • A nearly 30% increase in these reportable STDs between 2015 and 2019.
  • The sharpest increase was in cases of syphilis among newborns (i.e., congenital syphilis), which nearly quadrupled between 2015 and 2019.

https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2021/p0413-stds.html

Last edited 1 year ago
HotCoffee
Guest
HotCoffee
1 year ago
Reply to  HotCoffee

After briefly dropping in the early months of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) then resurged beyond 2019 levels to finish the year at a record high, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Researchers with the CDC said its report, 2020 Sexually Transmitted Disease Surveillance, shows how Covid-19 disrupted in-person healthcare and diverted scarce public health resources away from STIs, which had been on the rise for years.
Ultimately, diverting resources to Covid-19 caused young people, racial minorities and gay and bisexual men to suffer disproportionately from new infections, it said.
The new data provides “the clearest picture yet of [the impact of] Covid-19 on STIs”, said Dr Jonathan Mermin, director of the CDC’s National Center for HIV, viral hepatitis, STD and tuberculosis prevention. “Honestly, there’s just much to be done

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/apr/12/us-sexually-transmitted-infections-record-2020
No mention of Herpes.

Last edited 1 year ago
Lou Monadi
Guest
Lou Monadi
1 year ago
Reply to  HotCoffee

Nowadays a person can swipe right or left and get laid multiple times a day. With online dating and sex sites, it’s no wonder the sti’s are exploding. It’s pretty disgusting actually.
Im thankful that none of this was available when I was in my sexual prime, many years ago. I asked a millennial who uses tinder if he was worried about herpes. He replied “doesn’t everyone have herpes?”

Guest
Guest
Guest
1 year ago
Reply to  guest

But if you refuse a COVID vaccination, you WILL be shamed.

Will one also be shamed, if one is monogamous, and one refuses the monkeypox vaccine?

Will one be mandated to get the monkeypox vaccine, or shamed into it, to protect “Grandma”?

Corporate Serfdom
Guest
Corporate Serfdom
1 year ago
Reply to  Guest

If you can’t handle the shame, you will not make it through the apocalypse.

Farce
Guest
Farce
1 year ago

Monkeypox superspreader event at the Hog Farm this weekend!! Don’t forget to hug everybody you see!