
Along with increased communication, Council members Silverman, Charles Allen, Anita Bonds, Mary Cheh, Brianne Nadeau, Brooke Pinto, Robert White and Trayon White called for equitable distribution of monkeypox vaccines. “We are interested in learning more about how DC Health is applying lessons learned during COVID about communicating and distributing vaccines to the monkeypox situation,” the letter continued. In addition, the members asked that DC Health provide “data on vaccine distribution by ward and other relevant characteristics; an overview of current and planned outreach efforts, especially to those who are not on social media or have consistent/any access to the internet; and an explanation of the appointment scheduling process, especially how people with limited or no internet access are able to schedule appointments.”
The District’s current monkeypox data (as of Tuesday, Aug. 16) has been updated on https://t.co/E6wFDQf4OH
The current MPX case count in DC: 350 To see more data on monkeypox in the District, visit https://t.co/g9FLwpHy6v pic.twitter.com/LfuTpUcQHV — DC Health (@_DCHealth) August 17, 2022
The publication of the data comes as officials identify more than 16,000 people vaccinated against monkeypox, mostly white men between 30 to 64 years old. The agency is offering the vaccine to anyone who lives, works or goes to a college or university in the District and has had multiple sex partners in the past two weeks. WTOP has reached out to D.C. Health for more information on the tracker.
