Wednesday April 24, 2024

Germany recommends quarantine as monkeypox infection on rise

Published : 25 May 2022, 00:09

  DF News Desk
Lothar Wieler (L), RKI President, and Karl Lauterbach, German Minister of Health attend a press conference on monkeypox, on the sidelines of the German Doctors Day (Aerztetag). Photo: Sina Schuldt/dpa.

German health authorities on Tuesday recommended an isolation period of at least 21 days for those infected with monkeypox, as the World Health Organization (WHO) reported more than 250 cases from 16 countries where the disease has been detected, reported dpa.

Health Minister Karl Lauterbach on Tuesday said that "in the early stages of an epidemic, there needs to be a tough and quick response."

Contact persons should also be quarantined for 21 days, Lauterbach said.

Several states have reported evidence of monkeypox infections, with contact tracing under way in each location.

Lauterbach said that the monkeypox was "not the beginning of a new pandemic," and that it was furthermore a known pathogen with known methods of containing it.

WHO expert Rosamund Lewis said in Geneva that the outbreak could be contained. The current cluster of cases is worrying, but the risk to the public is low, she said.

The infections recorded worldwide primarily concern men who have had sex with other men. In contrast to the coronavirus, transmission via airborne particles is negligible.

The virus usually causes only mild symptoms such as fever, headache, muscle pain and skin rash. However, monkeypox can also be severe, and in individual cases fatal illnesses are possible.