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Home / Wellness / General Health / Everything You Need to Know About Monkeypox and the Vaccine

Everything You Need to Know About Monkeypox and the Vaccine

Monkeypox

The United States is deploying an enhanced nationwide vaccination strategy to counter the continuing spread of monkeypox, federal public health officials announced at a White House briefing on Tuesday.

RELATED: What Is Monkeypox, and How Worried Should Americans Be?

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is rapidly expanding access to hundreds of thousands of doses of the Jynneos vaccine, targeted to smallpox and its viral cousin monkeypox. Vaccine doses will be used to protect those Americans deemed to be at higher risk of contracting the virus, according to federal officials. But how do you know if you should get the vaccine?

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RELATED: US to Send Out 800,000 Doses of Monkeypox Vaccine

Here are the people whom the CDC recommends receive the Jynneos vaccine for monkeypox:

People who have had sexual contact with an infected person

Right now, those at the highest risk include anyone who's had close physical contact or sexual contact with a person with a known case of monkeypox.

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Also at high risk are gay and bisexual men who "have recently had multiple sex partners in a venue where there was known to be monkeypox or in an area where monkeypox is spreading," the CDC said in a statement.

RELATED: Monkeypox On The Rise In The LBGTQ Community, Here's How To Stay Safe

Healthcare workers

If you are a health care provider in the U.S. that has come in contact with patients with confirmed or probable cases of monkeypox, you should get the Jynneous vaccine.

The CDC also urges clinicians to keep a close eye out for patients who have rashes or lesions that look like monkeypox, especially those who have recently traveled to Central or West Africa or certain parts of Europe where monkeypox has been detected.

Up to now, officials have recommended vaccination only for those detected through contact tracing for potential monkeypox exposure, Walensky said at the Tuesday briefing.

That strategy has been largely driven by vaccine shortages, according to Walensky.

However, "now we are recommending that vaccines be provided to both people with known monkeypox exposures who are contacted by public health, and also to those people who've been recently exposed to monkeypox that may not be identified through cases of investigation and contact tracing," Walensky said.

When should you get vaccinated?

"Vaccination after exposure or using vaccines for 'post-exposure prophylaxis' is meant to reduce your risk of becoming infected with the virus and then becoming sick," CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky explained at the briefing. "Vaccination should occur within two weeks of a possible exposure, and the sooner you can get vaccinated after the exposure, the better."

There have been 306 U.S. monkeypox cases reported so far in 27 states and the District of Columbia, according to the CDC's most updated figures.

Worldwide there are more than 4,700 confirmed cases in 49 countries, Walensky says.

"The good news is on this outbreak, we have had no deaths so far, thanks in large part to vaccines, to tests, to treatments, and to the effectiveness of our health care system," said Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House COVID-19 response coordinator.

RELATED: The CDC is Monitoring new Monkeypox Cases: What is it and Should You Be Worried

How are doses of the vaccine being administered?

Doses of the Jynneos vaccine will be distributed to areas with the highest transmission and need, using a tiered allocation system, according to officials.

The federal government is making 56,000 doses of the vaccine available immediately, and another 240,000 doses will be made available in the coming weeks.

More than 750,000 additional doses will be made available over the summer, and another 500,000 doses will be released through the fall.

The U.S. expects to release 1.6 million doses of Jynneos vaccine this year, officials note.

How is monkeypox being monitored?

The ongoing global monkeypox outbreak also has prompted the CDC to activate an emergency command center for monitoring and coordinating response to the burgeoning epidemic.

The CDC's Emergency Operation Center has more than 300 staff who work with local, national and international partners to counter urgent public health challenges.

While data suggest that gay and bisexual men make up a high number of monkeypox cases, anyone can get it from close physical contact with an infected person. At least five U.S. women have contracted monkeypox so far, the CDC says.

Late last week, New York City became the first U.S. city to start offering the monkeypox vaccine to those at high risk for the disease.

RELATED: What Should You do if You're Experiencing Monkeypox Symptoms?

Demand grew so high that the city had to restrict vaccinations to those with appointments. The city had 1,000 doses of the Jynneos vaccine, and is working with the CDC to get more.

Despite all this activity, White House officials took pains Tuesday to remind people that monkeypox is a well-known pathogen.

"The most important point to start with is reminding folks that this is not a novel virus," Jha says. "Unlike COVID of two years ago, monkeypox is a virus that's been around forever. We've known about it for at least 60-some-odd years, and we have spent years studying and treating monkeypox in endemic nations."

The United States itself has had outbreaks in 2003 and 2019, Jha notes

Getting tested for monkeypox

Testing capacity for monkeypox also is being expanded nationwide, according to health officials. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention started shipping tests to five commercial laboratory companies across the nation, to make sure that testing is available in every community, the experts at the White House briefing said.

RELATED: WHO Declares Monkeypox a Global Health Emergency

If you experience new rashes or are concerned about monkeypox, contact your healthcare provider.

By Jessica Daniels, BDO Staff Writer | Published July 4, 2022

July 4, 2022 by Jessica Daniels

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