(Washington) Texas authorities confirmed the death of a person with monkeypox on Tuesday, but said they were still determining the disease’s role in the death of the “severely immunocompromised” patient.
Posted at 5:00 p.m.
The death would be the first caused by monkeypox in the United States since the recent outbreak began.
“This case is being reviewed to determine what role monkeypox played,” Texas health authorities wrote in a statement.
They specified that it was an adult person, whose immune system was very weakened.
“I believe further investigation is needed to determine what role monkeypox may or may not have played in his death,” a Centers for Disease Prevention and Control official told a news conference on Tuesday. (CDC), Jennifer McQuiston.
“It is important to stress that dying from monkeypox remains very rare, even if it is possible”, she added, indicating that only “a handful” of deaths had so far been recorded on “more of 40,000 cases” detected worldwide.
The United States has recorded 18,100 cases of monkeypox since May. The number of new infections recently appears to have slowed slightly, according to data from health authorities.
The epidemic primarily affects the gay community, and most transmissions take place during sexual intercourse.
According to a CDC study last week, since hearing about the outbreak, about half of men who have sex with other men have reduced the number of partners they have had, one-night stands, or their use of dating apps to seek sex.
To curb the epidemic, the United States has focused its response around the distribution of vaccines. The US government has announced that doses will be made available specifically at major LGBTQ+ events.
These include Atlanta’s “Black Pride”, two events in Oakland, California, and the Southern Decadence festival in New Orleans this weekend, which can attract up to 300,000 people and had no place for two years because of the pandemic.
The government has also launched an initiative to target smaller events, in particular to reach minorities more. For example, the “communities of the vogue and (music) house ”, which attract “a lot of young and racialized people”, said the Dr Demetre Daskalakis, Deputy Epidemic Response Coordinator for the White House.