The death toll from mpox outbreak across Africa has risen to 979, with a total of 38,300 cases, including 7,339 confirmed ones, since the beginning of 2024, the continent’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed.
In an online media briefing late Thursday, Africa CDC Director-General Jean Kaseya said the continent reported 3,186 new cases in the past week alone, with 489 confirmed cases and 53 deaths.
Kaseya emphasised that the outbreak remains a significant public health concern across the continent. Sixteen African countries, spanning all five regions, reported cases.
Data from the African Union’s specialized healthcare agency showed that Central Africa is the hardest-hit region, accounting for more than 99 percent of all mpox-related deaths reported this year.
Six central African countries have reported 33,735 suspected cases, 7,109 confirmed cases, and 975 deaths this year.
“With the increase in the number of cases, mpox is still a major public health issue in Africa. Last week, we had 3,186 new cases. Under this trend, what we are seeing for the past four to five weeks is (a weekly average of) 2,500 to 3,000 new cases,” Kaseya said.
Kaseya said the number of mpox cases reported this year marked a staggering 300 percent increase compared to the total cases recorded in 2023.
“We don’t see a decrease in terms of deaths. It means the outbreak is still there, still increasing, and we need to continue to be focused to stop that,” he said.
The Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burundi, Nigeria, Cote d’Ivoire, and Uganda represent the top five countries reporting the highest confirmed cases, accounting for 98.7 percent of the total cases.
MG/as/APA