This was an ethnographic study conducted between September 2022 and March 2023, with the purposive selection of urban informal settlements and interlocutors in Oyo, Ogun and Lagos States. We interviewed a total of 28 interlocutors who were either confirmed or suspected cases of mpox or parents of children who are confirmed or suspected mpox cases identified by the public health workers. Data were elicited through In-depth interviews and observations technique on the interlocutor’s local knowledge and their lived experiences on the therapeutics of mpox. Analysis of the transcript was done inductively using thematic analysis process.
The study revealed awareness and vague knowledge of mpox. Furthermore, the behavioural practices on how ailments are understood and managed revealed a commonality in their social actions in terms of local diagnosis and management. Mpox was perceived to be a mild disease, and this had implications on the local characteristics of the PHEIC in the endemic regions.
Our paper contributes to a more nuanced understanding of not only the health care access barriers, but the complex geographical, economic, and sociocultural factors that shape how and when people seek care for mpox within the context of urban informal settlements. This further draws attention to behavioural dispositions to the nomenclature of what is perceived as PHEIC. Thus, the global health and security paradigm should give room to local context, expertise, and global politics in shaping epidemic responses.