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First batch of vaccines to combat monkeypox arrive in EU countries

European Union health authorities said the first of more than 100,000 vaccine doses purchased in response to the monkeypox outbreak are being delivered to member states.

An initial 5,300 doses of the Bavarian Nordic A/S vaccine are arriving in Spain, with Portugal, Germany and Belgium set to receive doses next, according to a statement Tuesday from the European Commission.

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Further deliveries of the doses — purchased by the bloc’s new Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Authority, or HERA — will take place in July and August, it said.

The cousin of the smallpox virus has mostly been confined to developing countries for years, but has spread across Europe and the US in recent months. The current monkeypox outbreak has mainly been seen among some men, but concern about other populations is growing as infections increase.

It’s the first time that that the EU, through HERA, is directly buying and donating vaccines to member states, Commissioner for Health and Food Safety Stella Kyriakides said in the statement.

“With HERA up and running, the EU has significantly reinforced its capacity to respond and address new health threats decisively,” she said.

Read more:

WHO: Monkeypox is ‘an evolving threat’ but not a global health emergency

WHO eyes decision on monkeypox ‘emergency’, Africa says it's long overdue

Monkeypox virus feared to have more mutations than expected: Scientists

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