New York City asks to rename monkeypox, a name it deems stigmatizing

by time news

New York City on Tuesday asked the World Health Organization (WHO) to rename monkey pox – “monkeypox” in English – a name deemed stigmatizing and which risks pushing patients to isolate themselves rather than to seek care. “We are increasingly concerned about the potentially devastating and stigmatizing effects that messages around the virus monkey pox can have on (on) already vulnerable communities,” New York City Health Commissioner Ashwin Vasan wrote in a letter to WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

The latter had also mentioned this possible change in mid-June, which Ashwin Vasan recalls in his letter. According to the Health Commissioner, this “terminology” is also “rooted in a racist and painful history for communities of color”. In his letter, he recalls the negative effects of false information during the appearance of the AIDS virus (HIV) or of the racism suffered by Asian communities after the Covid-19 pandemic, which US President Donald Trump had described as “Chinese virus”.

New York, the most affected city in the United States

“To continue to use the term monkey pox to describe the current outbreak may rekindle those traumatic feelings of racism and stigma — especially for Black people and other people of color, and members of LGBTQIA+ communities, and they may avoid resorting to vital healthcare services for this reason,” adds Ashwin Vasan.

Anyone can get monkeypox, but since its appearance in Europe and the United States, the virus has spread overwhelmingly among men who have sex with men. New York is the most affected city in the United States in terms of the number of cases, with 1,092 contaminations detected since the start of the epidemic.

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