Monkey pox gay and bisexual

Monkeypox: vaccine to be offered more widely to support control outbreak

A strategy published today by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) recommends that some gay and bisexual men at higher risk of exposure to monkeypox should be offered vaccines to aid control the recent outbreak of the virus.

Although anyone can contract monkeypox, facts from the latest outbreak shows higher levels of transmission within – but not exclusive to – the sexual networks of homosexual, bisexual and other men who own sex with men.

The virus is not currently defined as a sexually transmitted infection, but it can be passed on by shut and intimate contact that occurs during sex.

In response, the UK Health Security Agency’s (UKHSA) vaccination strategy recommends offering the smallpox vaccine Imvanex, which is shown to be effective against monkeypox, to men considered to be at higher risk of exposure.

The strategy is endorsed by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), which was consulted on the eligibility criteria for the vaccine.

An individual’s eligibility would trust on a number of factors but would be similar to the criteria used to evaluate those eligible for HIV pre-exposure

Monkeypox: Why are gay and bisexual men more affected?

Regardless of sexual orientation, the main factor of propagation remains the multiplicity of sexual partners.

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As of July 26, Monkeypox has not caused any deaths in Europe, but the disease is gaining ground. With nearly 17,000 cases worldwide, World Health Organization (WHO) director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus triggered the extreme level of alert on monkeypox on July 23.

Santé Publique France (SPF), France's public health agency, has recorded 1,567 patients in the country since May. 3% of those own been hospitalized. This epidemic differs from the waves observed so far in a dozen African countries, notably in the patients' profile: almost exclusively men, most of them males who have sex with males, known as "MSM" in the scientific community.

Read moreMonkeypox: How is it transmitted and what are the symptoms?

The question is why MSM are overrepresented among the affected. First, it is important to keep in mind that the SPF figures are still incomplete. Screening is just starting and complicated by the fact that symptoms are nonspecific. "This virus behaves like a great imitator of herpes or

‘I felt like I was dirty’: experiences of gay men diagnosed with mpox in England

“After I left the clinic, I got very emotional. Not because I had monkeypox…But I felt let down by the way the discourse, and the way that the infection, the virus or whatever it is, was existence portrayed as good. It took me to a place where I just didn’t expect to feel in terms of my exposure, as a homosexual man, with lots of privilege in lots of ways. Usually I felt like I had dignity in the [health] service and the way I am treated by the government and the likes of that. And it just kind of really sped away suddenly.”

A recent study found that men diagnosed with mpox, clinicians and community stakeholders assume that the government's perceived inaction towards the illness was due to its association with stigmatised sexual minorities. This systemic failure was often compared to the initial response to the AIDS crisis.

Glossary

stigma

Social attitudes that suggest that having a particular illness or being in a particular situation is something to be ashamed of. Stigma can be questioned and challenged.

cisgender (cis)

A person whose gender identity and expression matches the biologic

Since early May, more than 23,000 cases of monkeypox have been reported worldwide. This is the largest ever global outbreak of the disease.

Cases have now been reported in 78 countries including the UK, Spain, Germany, France, the US and Brazil. Given the scale of the outbreak, the World Health Organization (WHO) has now declared the current monkeypox epidemic a global health emergency.

While anyone can get monkeypox, the current outbreak is overwhelmingly affecting sexually active gay, bi-curious and other men who have sex with men. In fact, our recent study which looked at 528 monkeypox infections since the start of the outbreak found that 98% of these infections had occurred in this collective. Here’s what these men need to know.

How it spreads

Monkeypox is a disease caused by infection with the human monkeypox virus, which comes from the same virus family as smallpox. In fact, symptoms are quite similar to smallpox and include fever, headache, muscle aches, chills, cold symptoms (such as a cough or sore throat).

Symptoms are also accompanied by a rash that appears in blisters on the face, genitals, the chest and assist, and on the hands and feet. Some people also experience ve

mpox (Monkeypox): What You Need to Know

The CDC has raised the alert level on a mpox (monkeypox) outbreak in the United States and HHS announced that it will be ramping up testing and a vaccine distribution for those most at-risk, which includes some members of the Homosexual community and people living with HIV.

mpox is a disease that can build you sick, including a rash, which may observe like pimples or blisters, often with an earlier flu-like illness. While the current outbreak in the U.S. has high rates of known cases among gay and bisexual men and transgender and genderqueer people, this virus is not limited by gender or sexuality and can spread to anyone, anywhere through close, personal, often skin-to-skin contact.

Health officials and advocates are urging people to seek treatment and available prevention options, including vaccines when available. 

What You Need to Recognize

mpox (monkeypox) is a disease caused by the mpox virus, which is in the same family as smallpox, although much less severe. Its specify is characterized by the pox illness that occurs upon infection, leading to an outbreak of lesions spreading from the meet to the rest of the body, including th

monkey pox gay and bisexual