‘I couldn’t believe I got it’: Atlanta man says he has monkeypox after touching surface on the job – WSB-TV Channel 2

ATLANTA — It’s a diagnosis a 28-year-old Georgia resident, who didn’t want to be identified, says he’s still wrapping his head around.

“I couldn’t believe I got it,” he said.

He spoke to Channel 2 Action News’s Ashli Lincoln exclusively through Zoom after being diagnosed with the monkeypox virus by doctors at Emory.

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“Now I’m here, and now I have to get treated,” he said.

He says he suspects he got the virus from his job at Six Flags Over Georgia.

“It’s just the fact that there are a lot of people that work there. There are a lot of guests that come in and out of the park every day that we operate,” he said.

Chanel 2 confirmed the man is, in fact, an employee with Six Flags Over Georgia.

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He says the park has done a great job with sanitizing in recent months, but he suspects he touched a surface or object after a co-worker who appeared to have the monkeypox virus.

“On the back side of his neck, you can see it. I didn’t touch him. I was just walking next to him; I was near him. Is it that contagious? Is it on surfaces? Like, where is it?” he said.

Latest numbers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reveal 851 confirmed cases in the state of Georgia.

As the numbers continue to climb, hundreds are lining up at vaccination events across the metro area.

This week, U.S. health officials announced that they’d be stretching the nation’s limited supply of the monkeypox vaccine by giving people just one-fifth of the full dose. Doing this would expand the 440,000 available full doses to more than 2 million smaller doses.

“It is itchy, and they told me not to scratch. I can’t scratch,” said the Six Flags employee.

The Six Flags employee says he’s in the process of alerting management. The amusement park sent us a statement Friday afternoon saying they’re unaware of any confirmed monkeypox cases.

The state’s Department of Health says 90% of the cases are contracted through skin-to-skin contact.

However, the CDC says the virus can spread through fabrics and objects after touching these items behind an infected person.

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