PHAC urges gay, bisexual men to practice safe sex as monkeypox spreads

Representative image of bisexual men/ credit: Pixabay

Canada’s gay and bisexual men have been urged by the Public Health Agency of Canada to practise safe sex and limit the number of their sexual partners due to the monkeypox outbreak.

Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada’s chief public health officer, told a news briefing Wednesday that despite the serious concern about the global monkeypox outbreak, public health officials and governments are optimistic about the opportunity to contain the spread.

So far the disease has been limited almost exclusively to men, said Tam with 99 percent of infected individuals in Canada being men who have sex with men.

Tam added that the monkeypox outbreak in Canada can be stopped by employing strategies including a public awareness campaign focusing on gay and bisexual men through community organizations, educational settings and dating apps like Grindr.

Tam said that learning more about the disease, including how to recognize its symptoms, is critical in the fight against its spread. 

Tam said there are 745 cases in Canada now

PHAC officials said that 70,000 doses of the Imvamune vaccine have been sent to the provinces and about 27,000 have been administered.

Tam said that Canada has a sufficient supply of the vaccine for now and urged vulnerable groups, such as men who have sex with men, to get vaccinated to curb the spread.

Michael Kwag, a policy director at the Community-Based Research Centre, a Canadian non-profit focused on health in the LGBTQ community was reported saying that men who have sex with men are already lining up to receive the vaccine.

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