What’s happening is somewhat similar to the first cases of HIV.” “We are facing an outbreak that unfortunately once again has hit LGBTQ people, and especially gay and bisexual men. “This is a disease that any member of the population can get,” Blázquez said. And then what stigma could be generated by these legal measures that sometimes are discriminatory,” he said.īut beyond the Pride March, Blázquez is worried that society could make the same mistake it did at the beginning of the HIV/AIDS crisis in the 1980s, when the focus on the disease among gay men obscured its spread among the wider population. We don’t know what the level of transmission of the virus will be or what legal measures could be taken. A top adviser to the World Health Organization said the outbreak was likely triggered by sexual activity at two recent mass events in Europe. Most of the known cases in Europe have been among men who have sex with men, according to authorities in Britain, Spain, Germany and Portugal. Health authorities have centered their investigations on links between a Gay Pride event in the Canary Islands that drew 80,000 people earlier this month, and cases linked to a Madrid sauna.īut some people, particularly gay and bisexual men, believe there is a touch of homophobic hysteria in the wider public’s reaction to the rare outbreak outside of Africa, where it has long been endemic. The World Health Organization has reported nearly 200 cases of monkeypox in more than 20 countries not usually known to have outbreaks of the unusual disease. The tally includes one woman, the region of Madrid said Friday.
Spanish health authorities said Friday there were now 98 confirmed cases in the country, the highest number in Europe. With one of Europe’s largest gay pride celebrations right around the corner, Spain’s LGBTQ community is worried that the outbreaks of monkeypox on the continent could lead to an increase in homophobic sentiment based on misunderstandings of the disease.