Stuff Digital Edition

Gay blame fears grow with virus

As mysterious cases of a rare and ominously named virus began surfacing in Europe, Germany’s disease control centre quickly told people to be on the lookout.

In a May 19 alert, the agency listed telltale symptoms of monkeypox: fever, aches, a rash. Then, in a further comment that set different alarm bells ringing, the bulletin pointedly warned men who have sex with men to ‘‘seek immediate medical attention’’ if they detect signs of the disease.

The singling out has sparked fears that gay and bisexual men, who appear to account for the majority of Europe’s monkeypox cases so far, are again in danger of being stigmatised as carriers of an exotic and frightening disease, just as they were during the Aids crisis, although the monkeypox virus can affect anyone.

About 250 confirmed and suspected monkeypox cases have been reported in some 20 countries. Although health officials are keeping a close eye on the outbreak, the caseload is minuscule compared with the 528 million coronavirus infections of the Covid-19 pandemic.

But as reports of the disease grab headlines, along with suggestions that the spread could be linked to a huge gay pride event in Spain’s Canary Islands, some LGBTQ people and organisations are bracing for a backlash.

In Germany, where the Nazi regime once sent homosexuals to concentration camps, officials say there are already comments online vilifying the gay community, with some calling the virus ‘‘gaypox.’’ A piece of graffiti painted inside a Berlin train read: ‘‘HIV and monkeypox = gift to gays.’’

The country has recorded five monkeypox cases so far. Much larger numbers of infections have cropped up in other countries on the continent, including Spain, Portugal and Belgium. Britain has about 80 confirmed cases.

The bulletin put out by the Robert Koch Institute, Germany’s disease control centre, has since been retracted, though the institute declined to state why. Some critics say the damage was already done.

‘‘It’s important to pay more attention (to the disease), yes, but it’s a mistake to oversimplify, and, more than anything else, it’s totally wrong to assign any blame,’’ Tobias Oliveira Weismantel, director of the Munich Aids Hilfe support group, said.

‘‘It’s misguided to attribute it to any particular group.’’

A columnist for Der Tagesspiegel newspaper in Berlin was more blunt. The institute’s alert contained ‘‘only one sentence that directly addresses one group,’’ the columnist, Ingo Bach, noted. ‘‘For some the message quickly became clear: ‘Only gays get this.’ The threat of stigmatisation is strong.’’

German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach tried to clear up misunderstandings about the outbreak, telling a news conference in Berlin that it was not the start of a new pandemic and that monkeypox was not an ailment that afflicted only gay and bisexual men.

‘‘It’s true that certain homosexual men – for example, sex workers – are now more affected,’’ said Lauterbach, who had been criticised for earlier singling out men who have ‘‘anonymous sex’’ as being especially at risk. ‘‘But the pathogen . . . can spread to all genders, to children, to adults and to adolescents.’’

The virus, first discovered in 1958 in colonies of monkeys kept for research and in humans in 1970, is found mostly in Africa. It is spread through close contact with an infected person, which includes sex but is not limited to it; shared clothing or bedding can also result in transmission.

Most patients recover from the disease on their own, without hospitalisation, within two to four weeks. The World Health Organisation says that, historically, up to 11% of people with monkeypox have died from it, with the rate higher among children. No deaths have been reported among the current cases.

A German government report to lawmakers this week said four of Germany’s confirmed cases were linked to exposure ‘‘at party events including on Gran Canaria and in Berlin, where sexual activity took place’’.

Lauterbach’s comments on the outbreak reflect the often-tricky position for health officials who want to warn populations that they think are particularly vulnerable to a disease without at the same time demonising them.

‘‘It’s really important to avoid panic and stigmatisation,’’ said Markus Ulrich, a spokesman for Germany’s Lesbian and Gay Federation. ‘‘Yet that’s exactly what a lot of gay men are seeing right now in the language from the health minister and Robert Koch Institute. They need to take a look at how they’re communicating this. They need to enlighten without stigmatising anyone.’’ –

World

en-nz

2022-05-28T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-05-28T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://fairfaxmedia.pressreader.com/article/281986086179829

Stuff Limited