Image 01 Image 03

Health Officials Warn of Rise in Monkeypox Cases in North Carolina

Health Officials Warn of Rise in Monkeypox Cases in North Carolina

Concerns are centered on the number of children being potentially exposed to monkeypox

Public health officials are now warning about a a rise in monkeypox (i.e., Mpox) cases in North Carolina.

Ten cases were reported among county residents in February, up from six in January. Nearly 120 residents, including children, were potentially exposed to those 16 confirmed cases, reports stated.

“While these exposures were isolated, to protect those most vulnerable to this virus, we need residents to be aware of mpox symptoms and to act quickly and responsibly if they have any symptoms of mpox, including isolating from others,” said Mecklenburg County Public Health director Dr. Raynard Washington.

Concerns are focused on the number of children exposed to the infectious agent, from an infected adult in schools, preschools, and daycare.

There have been 16 confirmed cases of Mpox since the start of the year in Mecklenburg County.

At least 120 people have been exposed. Of those, 40 of them were children, officials said.

“I don’t want to create mass panic,” he said. “I don’t want every parent to say, ‘I’m not sending my kid to school because I’m worried about it, or they can’t get on the school bus,’ or whatever the case might be … ‘can’t go to church or the rec center.’ That’s not the message we’re trying to send.”

The message is tailored more for adults. The kids were exposed because an adult likely went to work at a school, preschool, or daycare and caught the disease.

“The individual who was infectious was around those individuals for an extended period of time,” Washington said.

In related news, it turns out that the 2022 outbreak of monkeypox was curbed in large part by drastic changes in behavior among gay and bisexual men and not by vaccination. This finding is based on a new analysis published in the journal Cell.

Public health response to outbreaks often relies heavily on vaccines and treatments, but that underestimates the importance of other measures, said Miguel Paredes, lead author of the new study and an epidemiologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle.

Although the Food and Drug Administration approved a vaccine for mpox in 2019, getting enough doses produced and into arms proved challenging for many months after the outbreak began. Vaccines for new pathogens are likely to take even longer.

The new analysis suggests an alternative. Alerting high-risk communities allowed individuals to alter their behavior, such as reducing the number of partners, and led to a sharp decrease in transmission, Mr. Paredes said. In North America, the outbreak began petering out in August 2022, when less than 8 percent of high-risk individuals had been vaccinated.

Who could have guessed that stopping sexually promiscuous behavior would put the brakes on the spread of a sexually transmitted disease? The finding is quite astonishing (/sarcasm).

Finally, scientists studying the recent outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), which involves a different clade of the virus than the one responsible for the 2022 global outbreak, shows evidence that transmission is now occurring through sexual activity involving heterosexuals.

For the study, researchers interviewed 51 of 164 patients who were admitted to Kamituga hospital September 2023 through January 2024. Of that group, 24 were professional sex workers. The most common symptoms were fever and oral and anogenital lesions. Two deaths were reported.

Heterosexual partners were mainly affected, suggesting that heterosexual contact may be the main form of transmission. The investigators wrote that professional sex workers –primarily young women–were the dominant occupational group, suggesting that they and their clients may be at higher risk for contracting mpox.

So far, there’s no sign that clade 1 is spreading outside of central Africa, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control said in a December risk assessment.

DONATE

Donations tax deductible
to the full extent allowed by law.

Comments

Lucifer Morningstar | March 9, 2024 at 4:14 pm

I question these “health officials” motives if they are worried about a sexually transmitted disease being passed onto children. Unless adults in North Carolina are having sex with children I would have thought that wouldn’t be a problem. But I guess whatever it takes to drum up the panic about monkeypox and scam everyone to get vaccinated.

    CommoChief in reply to Lucifer Morningstar. | March 9, 2024 at 8:05 pm

    I could maybe see a transmission occurring at a daycare with a child needing a diaper change or a toddler with a skinned knee and holding them still to wash out the scrape. That’s plausible. That doesn’t explain why no similar cases in assisted living facilities with elderly folks getting exposed by their caregivers. If it was super contagious and just needed skin to skin contact are the caregivers who assist the elderly that much more diligent than childcare workers? Seems odd.

    Monkeypox can also be transmitted through touch, infected clothing or face to face contact so it is possible to get it without sexual contact but the main vector is unprotected sex between men.

    Funny this only became a thing in the US over the last couple of years. Wonder what has happened? Oh, mass importation of illegal aliens and flying or bussing the plague bombs all over the country.

    countryboy1947 in reply to Lucifer Morningstar. | March 11, 2024 at 3:00 pm

    Is this the next politically motivated health scam they have come up with since Covid as that all seemed to work well for them in election 2020. This crowd is quite capable of spreading health lies, in order to promote favorable political outcomes. I don’t trust anyone that works at any level of governemnt……as far as I could throw them. Seems like it is more about power and money than it ever would be for just healthcare.

We were a safer state to live in when we grew more tobacco than most anyone else. Tobacco Road was our nick name. Only had to worry over kids smoking at school in the bathrooms. We had a quality of life here, better than we realized.

    scooterjay in reply to Whitewall. | March 9, 2024 at 5:01 pm

    Over the state line in McColl, SC a friends grandfather was driving down a dusty dirt road in a section of town called “Greasy Corner” back in the 1950s when he came across one of the Turner kids whom was about three years old and clad only in rubber training pants, toddling along and smoking a cigarette. Mr Willis said he stopped and questioned the child about smoking at such a young age.
    Mr Willis knew the kid was a Turner from the reply, as the Turners pronounced a K as a T. When queried about the use of tobacco at a young age the waif thumped the butt at him and said “Tiss My Ass!”

henrybowman | March 9, 2024 at 4:54 pm

North Carolina. Thank heavens. Was not looking forward to having to refute white papers from Giffords and Bloomberg claiming that “Constitutional Carry Causes Monkeypox.”

I am not too worried. I understand that Big Pharma is working on a MonkeyPox vaccine and as soon as it’s available Biden will require everyone to be vaccinated. In the meantime, we need to keep everyone at home so it won’t spread and turn into a pandemic.

2 weeks to flatten the curve ….
shut the country down 6 months at least…

    Peabody in reply to jqusnr. | March 9, 2024 at 5:52 pm

    Critics say the name “monkeypox” plays into racist stereotypes and should be replaced with a scientific name such as LGBTQ-69.

      Peabody in reply to Peabody. | March 9, 2024 at 5:57 pm

      2 weeks to flatten the curve …. the country should be shut down until futher notice

      JohnSmith100 in reply to Peabody. | March 9, 2024 at 9:00 pm

      That was a great line, funny as hell.

      Milhouse in reply to Peabody. | March 11, 2024 at 8:49 am

      That is why they decreed that it shall now be known as “mpox”. Naturally I will continue to call it monkeypox, when I have occasion to call it anything at all.

      “…Still I’m gonna call it brontosaur, ’cause apatasaur’s a sore point with me”.

no in person voting … only
mail in and drop boxes …
to protect the children ….

Its gay male problem. They have no self control.

“I don’t want to cause mass panic…”
16 cases in Mecklenburg county is .01% of the population. Yeah, I’d say there was no reason for mass panic.