“The first deliveries of vaccines against monkeypox have arrived
in Portugal to protect Portuguese citizens and respond to the Monkeypox
outbreak,” said the commissioner, in a statement to Lusa.
Stella Kyriakides underlined that in the space of two weeks,
the European Commission acquired around 110,000 doses of vaccines and started
deliveries to the most affected countries, with Spain being the first Member
State to receive a shipment of 5,300 doses, on 28 June.
At the time, the European Commission, which negotiated the
purchase of a total of 109,090 doses of the third-generation vaccine from the
Bavarian Nordic pharmaceutical company, indicated that Portugal, Germany and
Belgium would follow between July and August.
“This work will now continue and intensify as we head
towards another period of autumn and winter, with the Covid-19 pandemic close
by”, the commissioner told Lusa.
According to the most recent data from the
Directorate-General for Health (DGS), released last Thursday, cases of
Monkeypox in Portugal have exceeded 400, and cases have also been reported in
Madeira.
According to the DGS, all confirmed infections are in men
between the ages of 19 and 61, with the majority under 40 years of age.