Awareness campaign on prevention of Mpox in Lilongwe communities: a response activity for Lilongwe Urban population

On 16 April 2025, Malawi confirmed its first case of Mpox clade 1b and the Ministry of Health officially declared Mpox an outbreak on 17 April 2025. The first detected case involved a 30-year-old male who presented with symptoms consistent with Mpox in Lilongwe, notably, with no recent travel out of the country, suggesting possible local transmission. Within a week of the first case, three more cases were confirmed from Lilongwe and Mangochi. Malawi had six confirmed cases as of 01 May 2025.

In response, to the Mpox outbreak, Lilongwe district activated its Incident Management System and deployed Rapid Response Teams to conduct contact tracing, where 54 contacts were identified. An isolation unit was established at Kamuzu Central Hospital with support from the World Health Organization (WHO) and other partners

Considering the risk and transmission modes of Mpox, the declaration of an outbreak required immediate response to contain the disease. The Mpox Incident Management Team (IMT) recommended widespread dissemination of Mpox awareness and prevention messages as a key priority. In response, the WHO Malawi Country Office provided both financial and technical support for awareness and prevention activities, targeting communities where the confirmed cases had originated.

In swift response to the mpox outbreak, WHO Malawi with support from UK in Malawi erected an Emergency Treatment Unit at Kamuzu Central Hospital in Lilongwe and donated various supplies to manage and curb the spread of mpox in Malawi
Alessandra Brolli
Dr Neema Kimambo WHO Country Representative highlighted the importance of early support.

“Since the WHO Director-General declared Mpox a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC), WHO Malawi has been supporting Mpox preparedness activities in the country. When governments declare disease outbreaks as Malawi has done with Mpox, WHO must immediately come in and provide the needed support both technically and financially. Currently we are providing support to MOH across all the emergency response pillars. Creation of awareness and prevention of Mpox needed urgent support. This is so because effective awareness and prevention interventions help us ensure that people understand the disease, its symptoms, and how it spreads, reducing misinformation and panic, hence our commitment to support Lilongwe”.

WHO supported Lilongwe DHO to conduct orientation sessions for community health workers on focused messaging for mpox, community engagement sessions for local leaders and mobile van announcements as
Creating community awareness on Mpox using a mobile van. Picture branded mobile van in motion
Christopher Teleka
Lilongwe DHO orientation on key messaging for Mpox for community health Workers
Christopher Teleka
Through interventions implemented in Lilongwe, over 48,000 people have been reached with Mpox prevention messages using mobile van announcements in surrounding areas and busy streets of Kawale, Area 36, Chilinde and Area 25. Community engagement meetings with local and opinion leaders have been effective as 192 leaders have been reached. This has an expectation to fulfil a multiplier effect as these community leaders have committed themselves to disseminate Mpox messages to their communities where they hold influence and trust.

One of the leaders Yohane Thomu, from Kawale confesses that before the meeting with Lilongwe District Hospital, communities were just hearing about the Mpox disease through the radio and other informal sources like WhatsApp and had nowhere to find more information about mpox.

"As a leader, I have had the privilege of understanding how the disease spreads, how to prevent, and our roles in the communities. I have committed myself to disseminate key messages about the disease to our c
Christopher Teleka
For Additional Information or to Request Interviews, Please contact:
Ovixlexla Kamenyagwaza-Bunya

bunyao [at] who.int (bunyao[at]who[dot]int)

+265 999 930 280