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Politics

Government taking 'targeted' approach to monkeypox vaccination: health official

Federal health officials are strategically positioningvaccine doses for monkeypoxacross the country in response to a growing number of cases, the deputy chief public health officer said Thursday.

A thousand vaccine doses have been sent to Quebec, which has 25 of Canada's 26 confirmed cases

Dr. Howard Njoo, Canada's deputy public health officer, said that the government plans to pre-deploy vaccine doses for the monkeypox virus across the country to prepare for outbreaks. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Federal health officials are strategically positioningvaccine doses for monkeypoxacross the country in response to a growing number of cases, the deputy chief public health officer said Thursday.

Dr. Howard Njootold a news conference that there are now 26 confirmed cases of monkeypox in Canada 25in Quebec and one in Ontario.

The viruscan cause a rash,fatigue, muscle aches, fever and headache. It'soften spread by close contact with an infected person especially an exchange ofbodily fluids but alsocan be spread through the air oron surfaces.

Njoo said that while the risk of infection for the general population is low, health officials are monitoring the virus closelyandwantto be able to deploy vaccines quickly in response to outbreaks.

"Following discussions among all the chief medical officers of health in Canada, we have decided to take a targeted approach to vaccination and treatment," Njoo said.

"We have moved quickly to pre-position limited supplies of vaccines and therapeutics from our National Emergency Strategic Stockpile, or NESS, in jurisdictions across the country."

WATCH|Government has no plans for monkeypoxvaccine campaign

Government has no plans for monkeypox vaccine campaign

2 years ago
Duration 1:17
Deputy Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Howard Njoo told a press conference that, at the moment, Canada is not looking to launch a vaccine campaign targeted at monkeypox.

The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) has sent 1,000doses of the IMVAMUNEvaccine to Quebec already, as well as a supply of the antiviral drug Tecovirimat, also known as TPOXX.

Njoo did not say how many vaccine doses have been sent to other provinces. Hesaid PHAC is working with provinces and territories to determine their needs.

"We need to make sure that the vaccine can arrive in a short course should a need or demand occur in a specific province or territory, based on cases and contacts who are at high risk," he said.

NjoosaidPHAC does not see theneed for a mass vaccination campaign right now.

Quebec's Public Health Director Dr. Luc Boileausaid earlierThursdaythat the province would start offering thevaccine to high-risk individuals.

Quebec confirmed 25 cases Thursday, all of them tied to the greater Montreal area.

In a news release Thursday, the Quebec government said the province received the doses on Tuesday.

"High-risk contacts of a confirmed or probable case of monkeypox, as defined by public health authorities, may be vaccinated with a single dose of IMVAMUNE vaccine within four days of exposure,"the release reads.

"The second dose may be administered only if the risk of exposure is still present 28 days later.The doses offered will be administered only following a decision by public health authorities."

Monkeypox comes from the same family of viruses that causes smallpox, which was eradicated in 1977.

Njoo acknowledged that the emergence of monkeypox in Canada may be alarmingfor some people, especially with theCOVID-19 pandemic continuing. He said that the viruses that cause COVID-19 and monkeypoxspread differently.

"At this point, certainly based on what we've seen to date with the epidemiology, [monkeypox]seems to be confined in certain individuals who obviously have been engaged in activities involving close contact," he said. "But there doesn't seem to be any evidence of what I'd call a more general spread to the community."

Though the viruses aren't the same, transmission can be prevented by many of the same practices used to control the COVID-19 pandemic handwashing, physical distancing and wearing a mask, especially in public spaces.

The National Microbiology Lab in Winnipeg is currently completing sequencing on monkeypox samples to help understand how the virus is spreading, Njoo added.