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Monkey pox: what is the maximum alert level decreed by the WHO?

The monkeypox epidemic is progressing. Nearly 17,000 cases have been identified in 74 countries, according to the latest figures from the World Health Organization (WHO). Detected in early May, the unusual upsurge in monkeypox cases outside central and western African countries where the virus is endemic has since spread across the globe, with Europe as its epicenter.

If Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director of the WHO, specified that the risk in the world was relatively moderate, except in Europe where it is high, the UN institution determined, this Saturday July 23, that the current outbreak cases constituted a public health emergency of international concern, its highest level of alert. But what is it exactly?

What is the global health emergency?

The public health emergency of international concern (USPPI) is declared by the World Health Organization (WHO) and must meet specific criteria. For the WHO, this level of maximum alert in terms of international public health can only be decided in response to “an extraordinary event which is determined to constitute a risk for public health in other States in because of the international risk of disease spread”. The objective is to be able to mobilize coordinated international action to try to stop the disease in question, or at least to curb it.

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