Germany to donate 100,000 mpox vaccine doses to combat outbreak in Africa

Germans to help WHO with financial resources to combat epidemic, support Africans with GAVI vaccine alliance

By
Reuters
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Volunteer pharmacist fills a syringe with a dose of the jynneos smallpox and monkeypox vaccine during a clinic through the Pima County Department of Public Health at Abrams Public Health Center in Tucson, Arizona, US on August 20, 2022. — Reuters
Volunteer pharmacist fills a syringe with a dose of the jynneos smallpox and monkeypox vaccine during a clinic through the Pima County Department of Public Health at Abrams Public Health Center in Tucson, Arizona, US on August 20, 2022. — Reuters

BERLIN: Germany will donate 100,000 mpox vaccine doses from its military stocks to help contain the outbreak on the African continent in the short term and help the affected countries, said a government spokesperson on Monday.

The government will provide the World Health Organization (WHO) with flexible financial resources via various instruments to combat mpox and also support its partners in Africa through the GAVI vaccination alliance, added the spokesperson.

Germany has around "117,000 doses of Jynneos", which is being stockpiled by the German army after Berlin procured it in 2022.

It will keep a minimum amount of stock, to protect travelling authorities, for example, said a defence ministry spokesperson on Monday. He added that a separate decision would need to be made when it comes to reordering vaccines.

WHO has declared mpox a global public health emergency after an outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo spread to neighbouring countries and a new form of the virus, clade Ib, triggered concerns about the speed of transmission.

The government was looking at the quickest way to get the vaccines to the affected countries, primarily the Democratic Republic of Congo, but also Burundi and neighbouring countries in East Africa, according to a foreign ministry spokesperson.