A government spokeswoman announced on Monday that Germany would provide 100,000 doses of the Mpox vaccine from its military stockpile to aid in the short-term containment of the outbreak on the African continent and to aid the affected countries.
The spokesperson went on to say that the government would support its partners in Africa through the GAVI vaccination alliance and will supply the World Health Organisation with flexible funding resources through a variety of tools to fight Mpox.
About 117,000 doses of Jynneos, which Berlin acquired in 2022, are being stocked by the German army.
For example, it would maintain a minimal level of stock to safeguard travelling authorities, according to a spokesman for the defence ministry on Monday. Reordering vaccinations would require a different judgement, he continued.
Once an outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo extended to adjacent countries and a new strain of the virus, clade Ib, raised worries about the virus’s rate of transmission, the World Health Organisation designated Mpox a worldwide public health emergency.
A spokesman for the foreign ministry stated that the government was considering the quickest route to deliver the vaccines to the impacted nations, which included Burundi and other adjacent countries in East Africa in addition to the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
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