mpox:-a-wave-of-false-information-after-the-who-alert

Mpox: a wave of false information after the WHO alert

August 22, 2024

The current MPOX epidemic in Africa has triggered another, this time global: a wave of fake news, with a backdrop of homophobia and conspiracy theories, after the WHO declared its highest health alert level on August 14.

– MPOX has nothing to do with shingles or the Covid vaccine

The video is translated and relayed on X and Facebook, in many languages: we see a German doctor known for his anti-vaccine positions assuring that the symptoms described for mpox are the same as those of shingles.

According to Wolfgang Wodarg, this shingles epidemic is a side effect of the Covid vaccine, and the pharmaceutical industry is only trying to scare people for commercial purposes.

This is false, firstly because MPOX, identified in the 1970s in a child in the former Zaire, is much older than the Covid vaccines, and secondly because it is a zoonotic virus, of animal origin, from the poxvirus family, while shingles – a reactivation of the varicella-zoster virus – is from the herpes family. The symptoms are also different, since shingles causes smaller lesions that generate characteristic intense pain.

– MPOX does not only affect homosexuals

On social networks, some people reassure themselves by claiming that MPOX only affects homosexuals, with homophobic messages judging these practices to be "disgusting".

But as Professor Richard Martinello, an infectious disease specialist at Yale University School of Medicine, explained to AFP, "no infectious disease in the world is transmitted differently depending on sexual orientation. It is intimate skin-to-skin contact that can allow the transmission of MPOX, and not each person's sexual orientation." It is the infected fluid contained in the patient's vesicles that transmits the virus, recalls Professor Antoine Gessain, a specialist in the disease at the Pasteur Institute, recalling that children can be infected "by skin contact", but also, as in the epidemic of late 2023 in the DRC, heterosexuals with multiple partners.

– there is no miracle treatment

A popular conspiracy theory, particularly on YouTube and Facebook: a drug against mpox is very effective but is not available, based on the words of the controversial Professor Raoult in 2022 that against mpox "the most effective molecule is a Japanese drug called Tranilast. (…) It will never be marketed here, because it costs nothing."

Except that Tranilast, approved in 1982 in Japan and China against asthma, has never been the subject of clinical studies on humans against MPOX. So asserting its effectiveness is misleading.

On the other hand, vaccination, combined with awareness-raising among people at risk and isolation of contact cases, has made it possible to contain the 2022 MPOX epidemic.

– WHO has not ordered any lockdown

"Attention, mega-lockdowns in sight!" warn Internet users, arguing that these measures were ordered by the WHO to "governments", thus attesting to the thesis of a "plandemic", a neologism describing an orchestrated pandemic, according to the conspiracy narrative.

The WHO does not have the power to order governments to prepare for these "mega-lockdowns," "or any type of lockdown for that matter," the organization confirmed to AFP.

"As a scientific and technical organization, WHO provides advice to its 194 member states. Each country has sovereignty over decisions and actions concerning the health of its populations."

In France, on TikTok, Internet users are even saying that due to the MPOX epidemic, "the start of the school year has been postponed."

Information formally denied to AFP by the Ministry of Education. As of August 21, no cases of MPOX of the new strain 1b have been reported in the country.

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