City
Epaper

Monkeypox cases in Israel surpass 200

By IANS | Updated: August 22, 2022 01:25 IST

Jerusalem, Aug 22 Monkeypox cases in Israel have totaled 208, with 11 new cases detected in the past ...

Open in App

Jerusalem, Aug 22 Monkeypox cases in Israel have totaled 208, with 11 new cases detected in the past four days, the country's Health Ministry said.

So far, more than 2,000 people at risk have been vaccinated in Israel with a double-dose vaccine against the virus, the Ministry noted on Sunday.

Israel in late July announced a vaccination programme for risky population, with the shipment of 5,600 doses produced by Danish firm Bavarian Nordic. The shipment of another 4,400 doses is expected to arrive in September, Xinhua news agency reported.

The Ministry added it was considering expanding the vaccination criteria to allow increased utilisation of all doses as well as to purchase additional vaccine doses.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: israeljerusalemMinistryHealth MinistryIsrAl qudsIsra
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS Drops Bunker-Buster Bombs on Iranian Ammunition Depot in Isfahan; Trump Shares Video

NationalUS-Israel-Iran War: Ships Carrying 94,000 Metric Tonnes of LPG Safely Cross Strait of Hormuz, Head Towards India

NationalIndia Plays Crucial Role in Ending War, Says Israel; Sets 4 Conditions for Iran

InternationalIsraeli Air Force Claims Strike in Beirut Killed Hezbollah Operative

InternationalIran’s New Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei in Coma, Loses Leg After Airstrike: Reports

Health Realted Stories

HealthAIIMS Delhi launches VR training centre for medical students

HealthCritical illness protection gap widens in India despite rising employer health coverage: Report

HealthStudy finds rising cancer rates especially after breast cancer treatment

HealthTobacco-related illnesses kill over 6,000 annually in Laos

HealthStudy links low birthweight to higher stroke risk in young adults