Mpox Information Repository

MPOX Information

KEY MESSAGES – GENERAL

Gavi remains concerned and has been following the situation closely since 2022, daily for past several weeks.Recognising the public health threat of mpox following the global outbreak in 2022, Gavi began considering investment in mpox vaccines as part of the process to define Gavi’s next five year strategy (2026-2030). As a result, in June 2024, the Gavi Board approved a number of mpox-related measures that will allow Gavi to both support short-term outbreak response and address the longer-term public health need, including through a stockpile. The latter is subject to successful fundraising for Gavi’s next strategic period.
For the immediate outbreak response, we can also leverage a number of mechanisms we have put in place to be better prepared for this scenario, including post COVID-19, such as: our Fragility, Emergencies and Displaced Populations Policy that helps to provide agile and coordinated responses in acute emergencies and the First Response Fund to enable rapid access to seed funding for vaccine procurement and response, and for protecting routine immunisation programmes during major public health emergencies.

Gavi is one of many health organisations that have a role to play in helping contain mpox: it is important that we now work together in ways that complement the broader effort and do not create duplication.
As COVID-19 taught us, coordination and information sharing as well as country preparedness will be critical to the effectiveness of the response. While many organisations have moved quickly to support the response, it is vital that efforts are not duplicated and organisations are clear in their own role and responsibilities, with no gaps or blind spots in the overall effort.
While vaccines will form one part of the mpox response, they must be deployed alongside public information campaigns and other interventions and medical countermeasures to executing a successful response, including vaccination campaigns and must be preceded by extensive country readiness preparations so that, when vaccines do arrive in countries, the capability exists to turn them into vaccinations.

Gavi is one of many health organisations that have a role to play in helping contain mpox: it is important that we now work together in ways that complement the broader effort and do not create duplication.
As COVID-19 taught us, coordination and information sharing as well as country preparedness will be critical to the effectiveness of the response. While many organisations have moved quickly to support the response, it is vital that efforts are not duplicated and organisations are clear in their own role and responsibilities, with no gaps or blind spots in the overall effort.
While vaccines will form one part of the mpox response, they must be deployed alongside public information campaigns and other interventions and medical countermeasures to executing a successful response, including vaccination campaigns and must be preceded by extensive country readiness preparations so that, when vaccines do arrive in countries, the capability exists to turn them into vaccinations.

Learning in where Gavi adds value.

Short-term

Having declared an emergency in the African region through our FED policy, Gavi has enabled countries to already reprogramme funds to begin planning for vaccinations.

•The fastest route to get vaccines to countries is likely to be dose donations.
•This is an area where Gavi has unique experience – as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
•Gavi is sharing its knowledge in legal, regulatory, technical, logistical, planning and training matters with partners that are in direct contact with donors, as well as helping facilitate directly the shipment of 15,000 doses that have been donated by the manufacturer, Bavarian Nordic.

•As agreed with WHO and other partners, Gavi is now able to procure mpox vaccines that have been approved by stringent regulatory authorities while the Emergency Use Listing (EUL) process is underway.
•WHO expects EUL to be completed within a month, following the acceptance of the full set of required information from manufacturers.
•We therefore do not anticipate EUL to be a barrier to Gavi procurement.
•It is important to have a clear picture on available supply from donations as well as demand by countries in order to ensure the correct amount of doses is procured.
•This process is currently ongoing however in parallel, Gavi is in near-daily contact with manufacturers.
•Affordability of vaccines is also a key concern.

•Established as a concrete learning from COVID-19, the FRF could be used as rapid seed funding for procurement, supporting ancillary costs, vaccination efforts.
•While USD 500 million technically eligible for use through a PHEIC, some things we are keeping in mind:

oFRF is for initial bridge / seed funding to ensure the initial stages of response are not delayed by lack of resources. It is not meant to support the mid- to long-term response for a single emergency. For this aspect of the response, other aspects of the Day Zero Financing Facility can be used to access resources rapidly against donor pledges.
oFRF is meant to act in this initial bridge funding capacity for all emergencies until 2030 – and unfortunately there will likely be more where the world will need mechanisms like the FRF.
oGavi’s role supporting the international response is to fill in the gaps where needed, and as part of this we are looking at targeted use of FRF resources.
oFor vaccine procurement, even the full amount of FRF funds would not be enough to meet countries’ vaccine needs. Therefore affordability of the vaccine is something on our mind and we welcome manufacturer statements acknowledging this aspect of ensuring vaccine equity.
oAny use of the FRF above US$50 million will need approval by the Gavi Board.
oHaving only been approved in June, the FRF is currently going through the final stages of becoming operational.

 

Long-term

We need to get to a situation where we have a stockpile of fully-approved vaccines ready for use whenever an outbreak occurs, similar to the Gavi-supported global stockpiles of Ebola, cholera, meningitis and yellow fever vaccines.

Recognising the threat of mpox following the 2022 outbreak, Gavi began considering an investment in mpox vaccines. In June 2024, the Gavi Board approved Gavi building a stockpile from as 2026 onwards – however this is dependent on raising funding for our next strategic period.

THIS IS DIFFERENT FROM IMMEDIATE OUTBREAK RESPONSE NEEDS: A stockpile must meet the long-term public health need, therefore the design of the stockpile is different from the current outbreak response need.

WHERE ARE WE NOW:


To set up an effective stockpile in the future, we need better data on the role and impact of vaccines in mpox response, and this will be an important part of our investments in a learning agenda.

Following the Board approval in June 2024, Gavi is already moving to invest in better data on epidemiology, surveillance, modelling of vaccine use and impact to improve our future response.
This will help countries, partners like WHO and Africa CDC, and our own mpox work in future, including design of the global stockpile.

•Tech transfer is absolutely critical, but given timeframes involved, this realistically will not play a factor in addressing the immediate outbreak response needs.
•Longer-term, Gavi is working towards the AU’s vision to build a sustainable vaccine manufacturing ecosystem on the continent. Here the African Vaccine Manufacturing Accelerator will play a key supporting role.

WHAT IS GAVI’S ROLE FINANCING THE RESPONSE?

  • Working in collaboration with countries and partners, Gavi stands ready to contribute relevant and timely operational and financial resources to the vaccine response to the Mpox emergency.
  • Over the past few years, Gavi has worked hard to learn the lessons from COVID-19 and developed ground-breaking new tools and flexibilities so that we are better placed to respond faster to Public Health Emergencies like Mpox.
  • We have already taken the first step by moving fast to provide rapid operational support to countries affected by Mpox outbreaks. Gavi has formally declared the mpox situation a regional emergency, allowing us to trigger additional flexibilities and streamline processes, underpinned by a no-regrets approach to risk. 
  • As a next step Gavi is leveraging its new innovative financial mechanisms in support of the overall response. We are rapidly assessing a drawdown from Gavi’s First Response Fund, which is designed to provide initial bridge financing during the first 50 days of a public health emergency whilst further resources are being mobilised.
  • The First Response Fund is not designed to provide substantial medium to long-term financing to the Mpox response. Should these be needed in the weeks and months ahead, additional resources would need to be mobilised in close consultation with global and regional partners.

• New and additional resources for the Mpox response could be frontloaded and made available at record speed to countries through Gavi’s Day Zero Financing Facility – a suite of instruments negotiated by Gavi with the European Investment Bank and the US Development Finance Corporation, where up $2bn in surge capacity could be made available if backed by new donor agreements and pledges.

Mpox Information Repository

Welcome to the Mpox Information Repository, a dedicated resource hub by Gavi’s CSO Constituency. This page serves as a central platform for civil society organizations, partners, and stakeholders to access and contribute vital information regarding Mpox. Our aim is to support coordinated efforts and enhance the collective response to Mpox by providing a comprehensive and easily accessible information repository.

Purpose

  • Centralize Information: Offer a one-stop destination for critical documents, meeting notes, invitations, key messages, and news updates related to Mpox.
  • Foster Collaboration: Facilitate the sharing of resources and knowledge among partners and stakeholders.
  • Enhance Awareness: Keep all relevant parties informed about the latest developments and strategies.

How to Contribute

We invite contributions from our partners and stakeholders to enrich this repository. Please provide:

  • Documents: Key reports, research papers, and guidelines.
  • Meeting Notes: Summaries and detailed notes from relevant discussions.
  • Invitations: Information about upcoming meetings and events.
  • Key Messages: Essential communication points and messages.
  • News Updates: Recent developments and announcements.

SUBMIT RESOURCES

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To ensure seamless contributions to the Mpox Information Repository, Gavi’s CSO Constituency has established a straightforward submission process. All contributions, regardless of type, can be submitted via a central email address: [email protected]

Documents || Meeting Notes || Invitations || Key Messages || News Updates