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The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention reports continuing transmission of mpox in Africa. Countries reporting cases in the latest update of 10 September 2024 are:
Burundi: 1 139 cases
Cameroon: 42 cases, including 3 deaths
Central African Republic: 278 cases
Cote d’Ivoire: 181 cases, including 1 death
Democratic Republic of Congo: 25 465 cases, including 635 deaths
Gabon: 15 cases
Guinea: 24 cases
Kenya: 115 cases
Liberia: 93 cases
Nigeria: 916 cases
Uganda: 10 cases
Advice to Travellers
Mpox is a zoonotic infection that is rarely seen in travellers arriving from African countries.
Transmission between people occurs through close skin to skin contact (including during sexual contact), or through droplet spread during close contact with a person infected with mpox.
Symptoms in people commence with fever, a flu-like illness and swollen glands followed by the development of a blistering skin rash, resembling chickenpox.
Travellers should:
Travellers to any destination who may be sexually active during travel (including GBMSM) should:
Travellers should be advised to seek medical help during, or for 21 days after travel if they develop symptoms of mpox and have:
While a vaccine specifically against mpox is not available, the smallpox vaccine provides some protection.
The United Kingdom Health Security Agency (UKHSA) classifies Clade I mpox (Central Africa) as a high consequence infectious disease (HCID). Operational case definitions are published here.
For further information see Mpox, Sexual Health Risks and LGBT travellers
Advice to travellers will be updated as appropriate.