Tuesday, April 16

Monkeypox: preliminary study by the CDC indicates that the unvaccinated would be 14 times more likely to be infected

Ambar Román

According to information published this Wednesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), those not vaccinated against monkeypox had some 14 times more likely to be infected than those who were vaccinated.

In this sense, the director of the CDC, Rochelle Walensky, declared at a press conference that these new data provide a level of cautious optimism that the vaccine is working as expected.

These figures are based on data collected from only 32 states and there is no way to distinguish how much of the reduction in positive cases is due to the vaccine alone and how much is due to behavioral changes among higher-risk populations.

Another alarming fact is that, according to the CDC, relatively few people in the current outbreak have completed the recommended series of two doses .

The IF Infections continue to decline week after week, but there are currently more than 25,000 cases of monkeypox identified in the 50 states.

Recommend applying two doses of the Jynneos vaccine

According to Walensky’s statements, health officials have seen protection against monkeypox for those vaccinated with Jynneos as early as two weeks after the first dose.

However , states that laboratory studies show that immune protection is highest two weeks after the second dose of the vaccine, so they continue to strongly recommend that people receive two doses of Jynneos spaced with 28 days apart.

“What we have right now is data on how well our vaccine is working after a single dose. What we still don’t know is what happens after a second dose and how long-lasting that protection is,” said Walensky.

For his part, the White House apepox adviser , Demetre Daskalakis, reiterated that people who might be at present or future risk are now eligible for vaccines, including: gays, bisexuals, and other men who have sex with men; transgender or gender diverse people who have had more than one sexual partner in the last six months.

The strategy also extends the vaccines to sexual partners of people at risk and commercial sex workers, Daskalakis said.

To date, the United States has administered more than 680.000 dose of the Jynneos vaccine, focusing its efforts on gay and bisexual men, as well as transgender and gender diverse people.

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