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CDC used smallpox and HIV programs to respond to mpox outbreak in the US

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CDC used smallpox and HIV programs to respond to mpox outbreak in the US
Photo by Dmytro Vynohradov / Unsplash

A recent report looked at how the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) responded to the mpox outbreak in the United States. The agency used systems that were already in place for smallpox preparedness and adapted programs designed for HIV prevention. The idea was to use existing tools and knowledge to fight a new health threat.

The report describes this adaptation process but does not provide specific results. It does not tell us how many people were helped, if the outbreak was slowed, or if there were any problems with the approach. Because this is a descriptive report and not a study with measurements, we cannot judge its success.

Readers should understand that this is a description of a strategy, not proof that it worked. The report shows what health officials tried during the mpox outbreak. More detailed studies would be needed to learn if using smallpox and HIV programs was truly helpful for managing mpox.

What this means for you:
The CDC tried using old systems for a new outbreak, but we don't know yet how well it worked.
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