Biden says quarantines for monkeypox aren’t needed in U.S.
But in the United States, “I just don’t think it rises to the level of the kind of concern that existed with covid-19, and the smallpox vaccine works for it,” Biden said at a news conference Monday after meeting with Kishida Fumio, the Japanese prime minister, at Akasaka Palace.
The president said he believes the United States has a sufficient supply of the smallpox vaccine to “deal with the likelihood of the problem.”
The World Health Organization has identified monkeypox cases in at least a dozen countries in which the illness is not usually endemic. It is a disease that is generally found in Central and West Africa, although recently, several European nations — as well as the United States, Australia and Canada — have reported cases.
On Sunday, Biden told reporters traveling with him during his five-day Asia tour that monkeypox is a “concern in that if it were to spread, it would be consequential.” Administration officials have said Biden has been briefed on the disease.
Though the world is still grappling to control the coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 1 million people in the United States alone, experts have cautioned that covid-19 and monkeypox are distinctly different. For instance, monkeypox does not spread easily between humans, unlike the highly contagious coronavirus.
Meanwhile, studies suggest the smallpox vaccine is at least 85 percent effective against monkeypox, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC says the United States has licensed two vaccines to prevent smallpox, with one authorized specifically for monkeypox.