WHO donates 2,400 monkeypox test kits to Uganda

The World Health Organization representative to Uganda, Yonas Tegegn Woldemariam (left) hands over a monkeypox test kit to Health minister Jane Ruth Aceng in Kampala on July 26, 2022. PHOTO | NMG

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has donated 2,400 monkeypox test kits to Uganda to help in its response against the spread of the infectious disease.

The WHO also accredited three labs — the Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI), National Health Laboratory Services, and another under the US Department of Defense — to carry out the tests.

While receiving the kits in Kampala on Tuesday, Health minister Dr Jane Ruth Aceng said the donation would strengthen Uganda’s surveillance.

“We have been carrying out tests for monkeypox. In the beginning, we were taking tests to South Africa as we run the race to make sure that the cartridges are available in Uganda,” she said.

She added: “Subsequently, the department of defense of the US government brought in the cartridges and we started testing in- country as we wait for WHO to accredit the laboratories that would test so that our results are internationally recognized.”

To date, the country has carried out more than 70 tests for the monkeypox virus, and all have turned out negative, meaning the disease has not been detected in Uganda.

Source: DAILY MONITOR

THE ETHIOPIAN HERALD THURSDAY 28 JULY 2022

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