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Liberian Scientists Detect Monkeypox Clade-Iib, No Mpox Deaths Reported

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Monrovia — The National Public Health Institute of Liberia (NPHIL) announces that Liberian scientists have acquired genomic sequencing detected and identified Monkeypox virus Clade IIb in the country. Also, Liberia has Zero (0) deaths recorded to date, thus giving Liberia a zero percent case fatality rate (0% CFR) in the region since the global and continental Mpox outbreak was declared by the WHO and the Africa Centers for Disease Control (ACDC) in August this year, 2024.

As of the Epidemiological Week Number 43, Liberia now has zero (0) deaths, fourteen (14) Recovered Cases, and only eight (8) Active Cases to date as reported by Liberia’s Mpox Incident Management System (IMS) presentation by the NPHIL to the weekly Africa-CDC Continental Public Health Director-Generals meeting this week.

“Acquiring full biomolecular sequencing capability now gives Liberia’s National Reference Laboratory of the NPHIL the ability to promptly identify pathogen-types (including viruses and bacteria) in-country, right here in Liberia, without sending specimens outside of the country,” said Dr. Dougbeh Chris Nyan, a biomedical scientist and current Director-General of NPHIL.

“Genomic Sequencing is a special laboratory technique that allows scientists to know the arrangements of the DNA or RNA or protein in an organism. In this situation, the technique then enables us to know if the pathogen has change [mutated] its genes as well as allows us to determine the origin or classification of the pathogens,” Dr. Nyan added.

Previously, specimens were sent to the NIH in the US and the NCDC in Nigeria, and the results revealed the existence of the Mpox Clade-IIa circulating in Liberia. With Liberian scientists also detecting a second type (Clade IIb) of the Monkeypox virus in the country, this new genomic evidence provides the NPHIL with directions on preparedness and response, approaches to vaccines and diagnostics, tracing the origin of the virus, and investigating its mode of transmission from animal-to-humans or from human-to-human in the communities, the NPHIL Director-General emphasized.