WHO to use ‘mpox’ for monkeypox to tackle stigma

Reuters

By Emma Farge and Shivani Tanna

GENEVA (Reuters) -The World Health Organization said on Monday it would start using a new preferred term, “mpox”, as a synonym for monkeypox and urged others to follow suit after receiving complaints that the current name for the disease was racist and stigmatising.

“Both names will be used simultaneously for one year while ‘monkeypox’ is phased out,” the WHO said in a statement.

The WHO launched a public consultation process to find a new name for the disease earlier this year and received more than 200 proposals. The United States, which was among the countries and bodies supporting the name change, welcomed the announcement.


The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)will also begin using the term “mpox”, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said in a tweet.


“We welcome and support the renaming to mpox to reduce stigma and barriers to care for those most impacted,” Walensky added.

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said “reducing stigma associated with disease is one critical step in our work to end mpox.”

One of the more popular public suggestions was “mpox” or “Mpox”, put forward by men’s health organisation RÉZO among others. Its director said at the time that the removal of monkey imagery helped people take the health emergency seriously.

Some ideas were farcical such as “Poxy McPoxface” which alluded to Boaty McBoatface – the choice of a public vote on the name of a British polar research vessel, before a decision to give it another name – Sir David Attenborough.

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The WHO said global experts settled on “mpox” after considering the scientific appropriateness, extent of current usage as well as pronounceability among other factors.

Mpox, discovered in 1958 and named after the first animal to show symptoms, mostly spread in a group of countries in west and central Africa until this year.

Around 100 countries where mpox is not endemic have now reported outbreaks of the viral disease.

The WHO has a mandate to assign new names to existing diseases under the International Classification of Diseases.

Generally, it seeks to avoid associating any disease or virus with a country, region, animal or ethnic group.

Last year, it assigned the letters of the Greek alphabet to new coronavirus variants to stop a practice of linking them with specific countries.

(Reporting by Emma Farge in Geneva, Shivani Tanna and Baranjot Kaur in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Ahmed Aboulenien and Jeff Mason in Washington; Editing by Mark Heinrich & Simon Cameron-Moore)

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