Monkeypox vaccines to be offered at Vancouver bathhouses as 21 cases confirmed in B.C. - Action News
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Monkeypox vaccines to be offered at Vancouver bathhouses as 21 cases confirmed in B.C.

Vaccines are being distributed at men's health clinics and bathhouses in Vancouver due to the spread of monkeypox, as 21 cases are confirmed in British Columbia.

Vancouver Coastal Health says it is targeting high-risk populations ahead of Pride celebrations

Closeup of a a hand sticking a need tip into an upside down vial of monkeypox vaccine.
A health-care worker prepares a syringe filled with the monkeypox vaccine in Montreal. Vaccination clinics are being prepared for Vancouver's gay community ahead of the city's Pride parade. (Christinne Muschi/Reuters)

Vaccines are being distributed at men's health clinics and bathhouses in Vancouver due to the spread of monkeypox, as 21 cases are confirmed in British Columbia.

Hundreds of confirmed monkeypox caseshave been recorded in the country, mostly in Quebec and Ontario. However, on Friday, a case was confirmed in southern Vancouver Island the first confirmed case of monkeypox outside the Vancouver Coastal Health (VCH) region.

The disease has not yet been declared a global health emergencyby the World Health Organization, despite a large number of cases detected daily. Officials have said the current risk to the public is very low.

Canadian authorities have, however, said the majority of people testing positive for the virushad sexual contact with other men. That led to VCH's vaccination drive at men's health clinics and bathhouses this week, targeting those most at risk ahead of Pride celebrations at the end of July.

Dr. Mark Lysyshyn, deputy chief medical health officer with VCH, said the vaccine supply is limited, but there is currently a high demand.

"Although we started vaccinating close contacts of cases and going to places where there had been exposures like bathhouses or cruising areas, we've now expanded the vaccination campaign to people who are at risk of getting monkeypox," he told CBC News.

Lysyshynsaid vaccines were coming from a national stockpile managed by the federal government, and demand was far outstripping supply.

"We have big outbreaks happening in Toronto and in Montreal, and so they've requested big amounts of vaccines," he said. "We have a smaller outbreak here, butwe want to avoid getting into the situation that they're seeing there."

Monkeypox can cause fever, aches, and chills, as well as a trademark rash or lesions all over the body.

Authorities have stressed that the infection can spread to anyone who is exposed through close contact with an infected person or contaminated objects, and it is not limitedto men who have sex with other men.

VCHare currently focusing on HIV clinics and bathhouses as part of the vaccine rollout, and are planning to set up a walk-in vaccination clinic in the West End Vancouver's historic hub for the LGBTQ+ community.

More than 100 vaccinated at one event

Tod Berezowski, general manager of the Steamworks Bathhouse in Vancouver, said there was huge uptake when his establishment had a two-day vaccination clinic last weekend.

He says 104 people were vaccinated over two days, and he felt an obligation to his community to get them protected against the virus.

"The way we need to really look at this right now is preventative," he said. "Let's just get it out. People want it. Let's get them there so that we don't have those cases."

A microscope image shows a brown, loaf-like particle amid a sea of purple.
A negative stain electron micrograph shows a mulberry-type monkeypox virus particle. The virus is not considered a threat to the wider public at this time. (CDC)

Berezowski said it was particularly important to do so for the city's gay community ahead of the Vancouver pride parade, which officially starts on July 31, but will have multiple events in the week leading up to it.

He says he was fielding calls for days after the vaccination clinic wrapped up, and he hopes that VCHwill continue to expand vaccination efforts.

"I kind of feel that if we had enough vaccines going around right now, people should be able to line up and just go and get it."

With files from Yasmin Gandham