And why would Tedros declare a Public Health Emergency of international Concern (PHEIC) for moneypox? Because $money [pox] talks, and that declaration enables WHO to call for more funding.
Turns out that the first PHEIC was declared in 2009 for the low severity swine flu epidemic. PHEICs were first defined in the International Health Regulations, which came into force in 2005. The $moneypox PHEIC is the 6th time the WHO Director-Generals have invoked such an emergency over the past 13 years. Hmmm...
Below, I reproduced part of a long article on the complications of changing the $moneypox name, today in STAT. But it WILL be changed, they say:
Monkeypox the virus
... The virus — actually the species of virus — is going to get a new name by next June. But that new name will almost certainly still contain the word monkeypox.
The naming of virus species is the responsibility of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses. Coincidentally, the ICTV is in the process of giving virus names in general a major overhaul, to pull them into compliance with the way other life forms are officially named.
Most other species have binomial names. Humans are Homo sapiens. Bacteria have binomial names too — think Escherichia coli (often written as E. coli) or Staphylococcus aureus.
Monkeypox is monkeypox. But that’s going to change.
A subcommittee of the ICTV that is responsible for revising the names of the various poxvirus species is in the process of finalizing a proposal for new binomial names for all the poxviruses. Within the next month or two the proposed names will be circulated to the poxvirus research community for feedback before being finalized by next June, the ICTV’s deadline for this work.
When that process is completed, monkeypox is very likely going to become Orthopoxvirus monkeypox.
“That’s certainly the majority proposal at this stage,” Colin McInnes, chair of the poxvirus subcommittee, told STAT in an interview. McInnes is deputy director of Scotland’s Moredun Research Institute, which studies viruses that affect farmed animals.
The subcommittee is aware of the mounting discontent over the name monkeypox. It is sympathetic to the concerns about stigma, McInnes said, and it is not unmoved by the complaint that monkeypox is a misnomer. Monkeys aren’t the natural host — the reservoir — of the virus, they are just the first animal that was seen to be suffering from the disease.
But the true reservoir host isn’t known. And there are a number of species of viruses that are named in the way monkeypox virus is, after the first animal species seen to have been preyed upon by the virus in question.
Moreover, the committee is concerned that dropping the monkeypox name could disconnect future scientific papers about the virus and the disease from the more than 50 years of science already in the literature.
“By no means have we come to a final decision yet, but certainly I would say the majority of the committee was in favor of retaining the name monkeypox, just in terms of the danger of losing out on all the early scientific, epidemiological research that is out there. And obviously that’s quite a lot,” McInnes said...
ReplyDeletehttps://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/976855
Three Doctors Accused of Spreading COVID-19 Misinformation Sue Twitter
Three doctors have filed a complaint against social media company Twitter, which suspended their accounts on the grounds that they had posted misleading information about COVID-19 vaccines.
On behalf of the three physicians, their attorneys filed the complaint on June 26 against the social media company for permanently suspending their accounts or for refusing to apply the blue verified mark to the account of a physician who secured a new Twitter handle. The complaint was filed with the Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco.