Yellow Fever Epidemic outbreaks in Africa need action, mass vaccination - WHO
The more than 2,400 suspect cases and 300 deaths in just four months in Angola "reinforced the potentially explosive nature of this disease and the risk internationally", he said.
Outbreaks of deadly yellow fever in Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo do not constitute a global health emergency but require stepped-up control measures and mass vaccination, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Thursday.
The
disease, which has a high fatality rate, has already spread to Kenya
and China and there is an unrelated outbreak in Uganda, generating fears
of the mosquito-borne disease jumping to sprawling cities in Asia and
Africa.
"This can be a devastating disease with rapid spread particularly in urban areas,"
Dr. Bruce Aylward, WHO executive director of outbreaks and health
emergencies, said after its emergency committee on yellow fever held a
first meeting.
"The big push really is around
surveillance and laboratory diagnostics capacity so that if people start
turning yellow and dying, you get diagnostics rapidly and vaccination," Aylward told Reuters.
The more than 2,400 suspect cases and 300 deaths in just four months in Angola "reinforced the potentially explosive nature of this disease and the risk internationally", he said.
The panel of eight independent experts, led by Nigerian Professor Oyewale Tomori,
said that urban yellow fever poses "serious national and international
risks" but stopped short of declaring it a global emergency like the
Zika virus or polio.
"Much concern was focused on (ways) to ensure it does not become what we do not want it to become," Tomori said.
Angola and Congo must step up surveillance to detect the virus and carry out mass immunisation, the committee said.
Luanda,
Angola's capital where the outbreak began in December, is now reporting
90 percent coverage with the one lifetime dose of the vaccine, Aylward
said.
The global stockpile of yellow fever vaccine
should reach 7 million doses by the end of May and up to 17 million in
late August, enough to combat current outbreaks but not if the virus
spreads and causes "potentially explosive" outbreaks in other urban
areas, Aylward said.
"We expect 7 million
doses, especially with additional doses expected by August, should be
sufficient. It is sufficient vaccine we believe to stop the transmission
that we currently know (of)."
He added: "So the expectation is the current situation could be handled with the existing vaccine."
"The
challenge would be of course if there are other outbreaks in other
urban areas, if these prove to be explosive because of an inability to
rapidly detect or vaccinate, that is when we could end up potentially in
a situation of needing to look at dose-sparing strategies."
WHO
is working with four vaccine manufacturers - Sanofi, Institut Pasteur
(Dakar), Biomanguinhos (Brazil) and Chumakov Institute (Russia) - whose
combined annual production capacity is 70 million to 80 million doses,
Aylward told Reuters.
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