Tag Archives: Spreads

China’s zero-Covid: Country braces for impact as virus ‘spreads rapidly’

Editor’s Note: A version of this story appeared in CNN’s Meanwhile in China newsletter, a three-times-a-week update exploring what you need to know about the country’s rise and how it impacts the world. Sign up here.


Beijing
CNN
 — 

China is bracing for an unprecedented wave of Covid-19 cases as it dismantles large parts of its repressive zero-Covid policy, with a leading expert warning Omicron variants were “spreading rapidly” and signs of an outbreak rattling the country’s capital.

Changes continued Monday as authorities announced a deactivation of the “mobile itinerary card” health tracking function planned for the following day.

The system, which is separate from the health code scanning system still required in a reduced number of places in China, had used people’s cell phone data to track their travel history in the past 14 days in an attempt to identify those who have been to a city with zone designated “high-risk” by authorities.

It had been a point of contention for many Chinese people, including due to concerns around data collection and its use by local governments to ban entry to those who have visited a city with a “high-risk zone,” even if they did not go to those areas within that city.

But as the scrapping of parts of the zero-Covid infrastructure come apace, there are questions about how the country’s health system will handle a mass outbreak.

Throughout the weekend, some businesses were closed in Beijing, and city streets were largely deserted, as residents either fell ill or feared catching the virus. The biggest public crowds seen were outside of pharmacies and Covid-19 testing booths.

Media outlet China Youth Daily documented hours-long lines at a clinic in central Beijing on Friday, and cited unnamed experts calling for residents not to visit hospitals unless necessary.

Health workers in the capital were also grappling with a surge in emergency calls, including from many Covid-positive residents with mild or no symptoms, with a hospital official on Saturday appealing to residents in such cases not to call the city’s 911-like emergency services line and tie up resources needed by the seriously ill.

The daily volume of emergency calls had surged from its usual 5,000 to more than 30,000 in recent days, Chen Zhi, chief physician of the Beijing Emergency Center said, according to official media.

Covid was “spreading rapidly” driven by highly transmissible Omicron variants in China, a top Covid-19 expert, Zhong Nanshan, said in an interview published by state media Saturday.

“No matter how strong the prevention and control is, it will be difficult to completely cut off the transmission chain,” Zhong, who has been a key public voice since the earliest days of the pandemic in 2020, was quoted saying by Xinhua.

The rapid rollback of testing nationwide and the shift by many people to use antigen tests at home has also made it difficult to gauge the extent of the spread, with official data now appearing meaningless.

Authorities recorded 8,626 Covid-19 cases across China on Sunday, down from the previous day’s count of 10,597 and from the high of more than 40,000 daily cases late last month. CNN reporting from Beijing indicates the case count in the Chinese capital could be much higher than recorded.

One note seen on a residential building in Beijing is indicative of the larger situation, reading: “Due to the severe epidemic situation in recent days, the number of employees who can come to work is seriously insufficient, and the normal operation of the apartment has been greatly affected and challenged.”

The country is only days out from a major relaxation of its longstanding zero-Covid measures, which came as a head-spinning change for many Chinese living under the government’s stringent controls and fed a longstanding narrative about the deadliness of Covid-19.

Last Wednesday, top health officials made a sweeping rollback of the mass testing, centralized quarantine, and health code tracking rules that it had relied on to control viral spread. Some aspects of those measures, such as health code use in designated places and central quarantine of severe cases, as well as home isolation of cases, remain.

Outside experts have warned that China may be underprepared to handle the expected surge of cases, after the surprise move to lift its measures in the wake of nationwide protests against the policy, growing case numbers and rising economic costs.

While Omicron may cause relatively milder disease compared to earlier variants, even a small number of serious cases could have a significant impact on the health system in a country of 1.4 billion.

Zhong, in the state media interview, said the government’s top priority now should be booster shots, particularly for the elderly and others most at risk, especially with China’s Lunar New Year coming up next month – a peak travel time where urban residents visit elderly relatives and return to rural hometowns.

Health authorities on Sunday ordered improvements in medical capabilities in rural areas by the end of the month.

Measures to be undertaken include increasing ICU wards and beds, enhancing medical staff for intensive care and setting up more clinics for fevers, China’s National Health Commission said in a statement.

Meanwhile, experts have warned a lack of experience with the virus – and years of state media coverage focusing on its dangers and impact overseas, before a recent shift in tone – could push those who are not in critical need to seek medical care, further overwhelming systems.

Bob Li, a graduate student in Beijing, who tested positive for the virus on Friday said he wasn’t afraid of the virus, but his mother, who lives in the countryside, stayed up all night worrying about him. “She finds the virus a very, very scary thing,” Li said.

“I think most people in rural China may have some misunderstandings about the virus, which may come from the overhyping of this virus by the state in the past two years. This is one of the reasons why people are so afraid,” he said, adding that he still supports the government’s careful treatment of Covid-19 during the pandemic.

There are clear efforts to tamp down on public concern about Covid-19 – and its knock-on effects, like panic buying of medications.

China’s market watchdog said on Friday that there was a “temporary shortage” of some “hot-selling” drugs and vowed to crackdown on price gouging, while major online retailer JD.com last week said it was taking steps to ensure stable supplies after sales for certain medications surged 18 times that week over the same period in October.

A hashtag trending on China’s heavily moderated social media platform Weibo over the weekend featured a state media interview with a Beijing doctor saying people who tested positive for Covid-19 but had no or mild symptoms did not need to take medication to recover.

“People with asymptomatic inflections do not need medication at all. It is enough to rest at home, maintain a good mood and physical condition,” Li Tongzeng, chief infectious disease physician at Beijing You An Hospital, said in an interview linked to a hashtag viewed more than 370 million times since Friday.

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Trump Spreads Rumors, Threatens Allies in All-Out Attack on DeSantis – Rolling Stone

The Republican Party’s midterm flop has accelerated the power struggle between Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis, and if Trump’s latest moves are any indication, the 2024 GOP primary is about to get real ugly real fast.

Republicans rolled in Florida on Tuesday night, with DeSantis rolling to reelection as governor and Sen. Marco Rubio doing the same. Things weren’t so rosy in MAGAland, where a string of Trump-backed candidates lost big. The contrast was enough for the New York Post to put the Florida governor on their cover and labeling him “DeFuture.”

The cover enraged Trump when he saw it on Wednesday, according to a source familiar with the matter and another person briefed on it. For decades, Trump has been an avid fan (and sometimes whiny critic) of the Murdoch-owned, right-wing tabloid. But on Wednesday, the former president trashed the paper as “garbage,” the person familiar with the situation relays, and complained about the Post and other Murdoch properties’ insufficient subservience to Trump. (A spokesman for Trump did not respond to a request for comment.)

Trump has been asking his advisors to keep tabs on high profile Republicans’ 2024 posturing, monitoring for signs that they’re moving away from the former president and toward DeSantis or other potential rivals, the first source tells Rolling Stone. And Trump has for months regularly insulted  DeSantis behind his back, accusing him of being, among other things, a MAGA rip-off artist who constantly steals from Trump and the ex-president’s family.

As he prepares to announce his own 2024 run, Trump has been soliciting dirt on DeSantis and other potential primary rivals, including Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin. Trump has also spread gossip about DeSantis, including unverified allegations about his private life. Rolling Stone is declining to repeat what Trump has said. 

This type of gossip accumulation and dissemination is a common habit of Trump’s, one that he took to the White House, even when dealing with foreign leaders and highly sensitive U.S. intelligence. He’s using it against DeSantis while also stepping up his public attacks.

Since last year, both men had sought, for mutual political benefit, to keep their feud mostly veiled from public view, but in recent days Trump has grown more publicly antagonistic. Before the election results came in on Tuesday, Trump threatened to release information about the governor. “I will tell you things about him that won’t be very flattering,” Trump told The Wall Street Journal on his private jet after departing a rally in Dayton, Ohio, on Monday. “I know more about him than anybody other than perhaps his wife, who is really running his campaign.”

One of Trump’s lawyers went after DeSantis during a recent rally, saying that the governor owes his success to Trump. “DeSantis is DeSantis because of Trump,” said Trump attorney Alina Habba at a Monday rally in Ohio, the Daily Beast reported. “He needs to stay in Florida,” she added.

The results seem to have struck a nerve for Trump, judging by his Wednesday posts on his app, Truth Social. Trump on Wednesday wrote: “Now that the Election in Florida is over, and everything went quite well, shouldn’t it be said that in 2020, I got 1.1 Million more votes in Florida than Ron D got this year, 5.7 million to 4.6 Million? Just Asking?”

Trump ran in a general election, when turnout is consistently far higher than in midterms. And regarding the results of those midterms, Trump defended his record, despite losses from high-profile candidates. “While in certain ways yesterday’s election was somewhat disappointing, from my personal standpoint it was a very big victory – 219 WINS and 15 Losses in the General – Who has ever done better than that?” he wrote.

Not everyone was so impressed with Trump’s record. The New York Post on Thursday again went after the former president. “Trumpty Dumpty” read the cover line under an egg-shaped rendering of the former president. “Don (who couldn’t build a great wall) had a great fall — can all the GOP’s men put the party back together again?”



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CDC Urges Vaccines as Virus Spreads – NBC New York

About 8% of wastewater samples tested in a 13-county area around New York City in recent months came back positive for polio, the CDC said Friday, indicating sustained community transmission of the virus in the region.

The testing follows the discovery of a case of paralytic polio in an unvaccinated Rockland County man this summer. Thus far, he is the only known case – but the data published Friday make clear the virus has spread widely.

Between March 9 and October 11, researchers collected 1,076 wastewater samples from 48 sites covering 13 counties in the region. Of those, 89 samples, or 8.3% of the total, tested positive for poliovirus type 2.

“Although most persons in the United States are sufficiently immunized, unvaccinated or undervaccinated persons living or working in Kings, Orange, Queens, Rockland, or Sullivan counties, New York should complete the polio vaccination series as soon as possible,” the researchers wrote.

Of the 89 positive samples, 82 were genetically linked to the Rockland County man’s infection, and 80 of those 82 were found in Rockland, Sullivan and Orange counties.

A total of seven positive samples were found from sites serving the New York City area.

“Wastewater testing in conjunction with high-quality AFM (acute flaccid myelitis) surveillance, has helped clarify the scope of the polio outbreak in New York, which indicates community transmission in a five-county area near the only identified symptomatic patient,” the CDC wrote.

Its researchers stress anyone living in Kings, Orange, Queens, Rockland or Sullivan counties complete their vaccination series against the polio virus as soon as possible.

Last week, the CDC said it was considering using an oral polio vaccine for the first time in two decades in an effort to stop a potential outbreak.

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The Memo: Unease about Trump’s legal woes spreads through GOP

Former President Trump has had one of his worst weeks on the legal front — and it is causing unease even among Republicans.

The most dramatic news was the suit filed by New York Attorney General Letitia James that accuses Trump, three of his adult children and the Trump Organization of huge fraud.

The case is civil, not criminal, but James is seeking a judgment of $250 million against the defendants.

Later the same day, a federal appeals court ruled against Trump in the dispute over sensitive documents seized by the FBI from his Mar-a-Lago estate in August. 

The appellate court’s verdict gives investigators immediate access to around 100 documents that were marked as classified, rather than having to wait for a separate ruling from a court-appointed special master.

Meanwhile, a probe in Georgia is still not getting the level of national attention that its gravity merits.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has told 17 people that they are targets of her investigation into efforts by Trump and his allies to overturn the 2020 election result in the state. 

Among those facing the possibility of indictment is Rudy Giuliani, the former New York City mayor and Trump attorney.

Willis recently told The Washington Post that, if and when indictments are eventually issued, “people are facing prison sentences.”

The political ramifications have begun to worry some Republicans — and not only those within the strident but thin anti-Trump ranks. 

“The legal issues are motivating Trump’s base, who believe he’s being targeted by Democrats. But it’s not playing well with swing voters,” Dan Eberhart, a significant GOP donor, told this column.

Eberhart, who donated around $100,000 to Trump’s 2020 reelection effort but has become more critical in the years since, added that the former president’s legal woes are complicating the midterm calculus for GOP candidates.

“Any candidate that tries to distance themselves from him over the legal stuff risks him attacking them and costing them base voters. It’s a mess,” Eberhart complained.

Sam Nunberg, who worked on the early stages of Trump’s 2016 campaign but has had a checkered relationship with him in the years since, viewed the recent developments through the prism of a possible 2024 bid.

Nunberg said Trump appeared to get a “bump” of sympathetic support among some Republicans in the wake of the Mar-a-Lago raid but it appears to have subsided.

“I just can’t see the Republican Party nominating someone who lost the previous election, could only serve one term, and is under multiple investigations and possible indictments — especially when there is an obvious alternative,” Nunberg said, referring to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R).

Trump also deepened GOP dismay when he made the bizarre claim, during a Wednesday evening interview with Sean Hannity of Fox News, that a president could declassify secret documents by “thinking about it.”

At least four GOP senators, including Senate Republican Whip John Thune (S.D.) dissented from that view in separate comments to CNN reporter Manu Raju.

Trump has responded to his various legal setbacks with rage — often a sign that the former president is feeling the pressure.

Reacting to the suit filed in New York, Trump described James, who is Black, as a “racist” and a “fraud.”

In relation to Georgia, the former president took aim at Willis soon after her comments about “jail sentences.” He complained that Willis was trying to “prosecute a very popular president” and was engaged in “a strictly political Witch Hunt!”

There is no good time for the kind of grim legal news Trump has received this week — but right now is particularly bad.

The former president is edging closer to declaring his 2024 candidacy, holding rallies in recent weeks in Pennsylvania and Ohio. The events were ostensibly to help GOP candidates in those states but, in practice, looked like rallies for a coming Trump campaign.

Trump’s primacy within the GOP is also coming under new challenge, especially from DeSantis. 

The Florida governor has been holding public events far from his native state in recent weeks. And the flights of migrants he organized from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts have proven popular with the right-wing populist base that dominates today’s GOP, even though DeSantis’s gambit is deeply contentious with the general public.

In tandem, there is nervousness in Republican circles about the state of the midterms campaign. 

A few months back, the GOP was confident of sweeping gains in both chambers of Congress. Now, the battle for the Senate tilts slightly toward Democrats, while expectations for GOP gains in the House have become more modest.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) recent observation about the importance of “candidate quality,” was widely seen as a jab at Trump-endorsed Senate nominees such as Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania and Herschel Walker in Georgia.

Trump’s poll ratings rarely shift but they have eroded slightly in some polls amid the blizzard of bad news. 

An NBC News survey released last Sunday found just 34 percent of registered voters holding a favorable view of the former president. It was his lowest rating in that poll since April 2021.

Democrats, for their part, can hardly contain their delight.

“Nobody in any sort of swing state is embracing Donald Trump as they would have 12 months ago,” said Dick Harpootlian, a prominent Democrat and state senator in South Carolina who also served on President Biden’s fundraising committee during the 2020 campaign.

“It is not just the legal difficulties, it is the election-denying. Beyond the My Pillow guy, that is not seen as a normal or rational position,” he added, referring to fervent Trump ally Mike Lindell. 

“Trump lost the election. He can’t get past that, his people can’t get past that. But the American public has got past that,” Harpootlian said.

The Memo is a reported column by Niall Stanage.

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Wendy’s E. coli outbreak spreads to New York, likely more sick than reported: CDC

The E. coli outbreak linked to romaine lettuce from Wendy’s fast food restaurants has spread to New York and Kentucky, part of six states where the illness has been discovered.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there are at least 97 reported cases in Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Kentucky and New York. More than half of the infections are in Michigan.

“The true number of sick people in this outbreak is likely higher than the number reported, and the outbreak may not be limited to the states with known illnesses,” the CDC cautioned in its statement. 

Some cases have had more severe outcomes, including 43 individuals who were hospitalized. Most of the illnesses have been in Michigan, with just one each in New York and Kentucky. 

Of the 97 reported cases, 43 people have been hospitalized and 10 have developed hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), a severe complication that can cause kidney failure. According to the CDC, there have not been any reported deaths.

The outbreak is linked to the restaurant chain’s romaine lettuce.
Corbis via Getty Images

E. Coli is a bacterium that lives in the digestive tracks of animals and humans while most varieties are harmless, some can cause severe illness. Symptoms include severe stomach cramps, diarrhea, and vomiting. Some people experience high fevers and many develop life-threatening conditions.

On Aug. 21, Wendy’s removed the lettuce from its restaurants in Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania. The CDC noted that Wendy’s uses a different type of romaine lettuce for salads than in its sandwiches.

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Tomato flu outbreak in India spreads to two more states | India

An outbreak of a new viral infection referred to as tomato flu that was first detected in children in the southern Indian state of Kerala in May has spread to two other states.

According to an article in the Lancet Respiratory Medicine, 82 children aged under five had been diagnosed with the virus in Kerala as of 26 July.

Cases have now been reported in neighbouring Tamil Nadu state and in Odisha in the east, where children as old as nine have been infected, even though the virus usually affects under-fives.

Scientists are still trying to identify exactly what this virus is. It has been referred to as tomato flu because of the painful red blisters it produces on the body, and it is very contagious. Children are particularly vulnerable because it spreads easily through close contact, such as via nappies, touching unclean surfaces or putting things in mouths.

“The rare viral infection is in an endemic state and is considered non-life-threatening; however, because of the dreadful experience of the Covid-19 pandemic, vigilant management is desirable to prevent further outbreaks,” the Lancet article said.

Doctors say diagnosing tomato flu is difficult because its symptoms are very similar to those of Covid, chikungunya and dengue fever. The latter two are common in India during the rainy season and are spread by mosquitoes. Chikungunya is particularly widespread in Kerala.

The Lancet article says tomato flu could be an after-effect of chikungunya or dengue fever in children rather than a viral infection.

It adds: “The virus could also be a new variant of the viral hand, foot and mouth disease, a common infectious disease targeting mostly children aged one to five years and immunocompromised adults, and some case studies have even shown hand, foot and mouth disease in immunocompetent adults.”

Dr Suneela Garg, a senior health official in the Delhi government, said: “I agree that chikingunya and dengue can leave children vulnerable to tomato flu because their immune systems are weaker. We don’t have any cases in Delhi yet and I am confident it won’t become a problem.”

The spread of tomato flu comes as India has recorded a steady rise in Covid cases in the past few weeks, along with cases of swine flu.

Prof Dileep Mavalankar, of the Institute of Public Health in Gandhinagar, said: “Swine flu had declined during Covid but it is now on the rise again in the big cities. But because the test for it is expensive, few people get tested for it so the numbers are unclear.”

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What to Know About Polio: Vaccines, Symptoms and How It Spreads

Even after someone recovers from polio, they can develop muscle pain, weakness or paralysis 15 to 40 years later. Children who recover from polio may experience post-polio syndrome as adults, with muscle weakness, fatigue, and joint pain setting in decades after their initial infection. It’s not clear why only some people develop post-polio syndrome, but those who experienced severe polio cases may be more susceptible.

Polio is very contagious. It spreads from person to person — typically, when someone is in contact with the feces of an infected person and then touches their mouth. This is particularly concerning for children under 5, who, Dr. Esper said, may struggle with hand hygiene. “Every adult who has children knows that’s how germs are spread,” he said. Less commonly, polio can be spread when droplets from an infected person sneezing or coughing enter someone’s mouth.

And as with Covid-19, it is possible to spread the virus even if you don’t have symptoms.

The oral polio vaccine, which helped the United States eliminate polio and is not administered in the country any more, contains weakened live poliovirus. In rare cases, the virus can revert to a so-called “vaccine-derived polio,” and can lead to disease, said Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. Health officials in New York confirmed that the person in Rockland County was exposed to someone who received the oral polio vaccine, which mutated to a pathogenic form of the virus. The oral polio vaccine has not been administered in the United States since 2000. Today, the polio vaccine in the United States is a highly effective shot, which does not contain live virus, unlike the oral vaccine.

There are many countries that still use the oral vaccine. “We’re always at risk of having that vaccine-derived strain come into this country,” Dr. Offit said.

Vaccination is the best way to guard against polio, and the highly effective vaccine is part of a regular childhood immunization schedule in the United States.

“This is the good news about living in the vaccine era,” said Dr. Offit, who grew up during the 1950s and remembered his mother forbidding him from swimming in a public pool for fear of contracting the virus. “You just need to get vaccinated.”

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California Declares State of Emergency as Monkeypox Spreads

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom of California declared a state of emergency on Monday to address a monkeypox outbreak, making the state the third in four days to elevate its public health response to the rapidly spreading disease.

The declaration followed similar actions by New York on Friday and Illinois on Monday, and by the city of San Francisco on Thursday. Mayor Eric Adams of New York also declared a local emergency on Monday.

“California is working urgently across all levels of government to slow the spread of monkeypox, leveraging our robust testing, contact tracing and community partnerships strengthened during the pandemic to ensure that those most at risk are our focus for vaccines, treatment and outreach,” Mr. Newsom said in a statement.

“We’ll continue to work with the federal government to secure more vaccines, raise awareness about reducing risk and stand with the L.G.B.T.Q. community fighting stigmatization,” he added.

The moves, which help streamline and coordinate the monkeypox response among different levels of government, come amid an uptick in infections as well as increasingly vocal complaints about the public health response.

Nearly 6,000 cases of monkeypox have been reported nationally since May, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with nearly half of them reported in California, Illinois and New York. The World Health Organization has already declared the virus to be a global health emergency.

No deaths have been reported so far in the United States, and monkeypox is rarely fatal, but the rash caused by the virus has led to intense pain in some patients. The virus spreads primarily via prolonged physical contact, but it can also be transmitted via shared linens and clothing, health officials say.

Men who have sex with men have so far made up about 99 percent of the confirmed cases. Public health officials emphasize that the virus can spread to anyone who has prolonged skin-to-skin contact with a person who has the rash.

The U.S. case count is among the highest in the world, and health officials say the figure is almost certainly an underestimate.

Federal health officials say they have not yet declared a health emergency at the national level in part because monkeypox is a known disease with tests, vaccines and treatments available.

But as the virus has spread and scientists have gathered research, the emerging picture has been a bit more complicated than in past outbreaks, and pressure has intensified for more aggressive measures.

Last week, President Biden’s health secretary urged states and municipalities to take more initiative, noting that most public health powers in the United States are concentrated at local levels.

“We don’t control public health in the 50 states, in the territories and in the tribal jurisdictions,” Xavier Becerra, the secretary of health and human services, said in response to a reporter’s question about whether the virus could be eliminated. “We rely on our partnership to work with them. They need to work with us.”

California’s emergency declaration will allow Emergency Medical Services workers to administer federally approved monkeypox vaccines.

Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York issued an emergency declaration on Friday, saying the move would pressure the federal health officials to send additional monkeypox vaccines to the state. On Monday, Gov. J.B. Pritzker of Illinois followed suit, calling monkeypox “a rare but potentially serious disease that requires the full mobilization of all available public health resources.”

Mr. Pritzker added that the effort would “ensure our L.G.B.T. Q.+ community has the resources they need to stay safe while ensuring members are not stigmatized as they access critical health care.”

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As monkeypox spreads globally, Americans share their concerns

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Residents in New York and Virginia shared their level of concern over monkeypox after the World Health Organization declared the virus a global health emergency. 

“Sometimes I feel like there’s a lot of fearmongering going on,” Charity, from Virginia, told Fox News. “They’re trying to make us scared.” 

But another Virginian, Letitia, said monkeypox is “definitely something to be concerned about.”

“If you touch someone whose got monkeypox and they have like a rash or a scab, it can be transmitted that way, or you touch maybe something that they touched it can be transmitted that way,” Letitia said. “That’s scary.” 

MONKEYPOX ISN’T ‘SAME KIND OF VIRUS’ AS COVID, DOCTOR SAYS

Letitia, from Virginia, says there is definitely cause to be concerned about the monkeypox virus. (Jon Michael Raasch/Fox News Digital)

Cases in the U.S. have grown to over 3,500 – with the majority in New York – since the first case was confirmed in May, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Monkeypox, similar to smallpox, causes a puss-filled rash, fever and aches. Children and people with immune deficiencies tend to face more severe cases.

“The fact that [the WHO] did declare that level of critical mass is very scary,” Greg, from Virginia, said. “I’m waiting for how we need to better prepare for this and if it’s time for masks again.” 

US MONKEYPOX CASES JUMP AS TESTING INCREASES

Test tubes labeled “Monkeypox virus positive and negative” are seen in this illustration taken May 23, 2022.
(Reuters/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo)

Charity, from Virginia told Fox News: “I got COVID-19, and I was like I’m really probably gonna die because of how they made it seem.” 

“When I had COVID-19, it wasn’t really that bad, so it’s probably the same situation,” she continued. 

WHITE HOUSE COVID ADVISER ADDRESSES CURRENT MONKEYPOX THREAT LEVEL

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has killed more than one million people in the U.S. since January 2020, according to the WHO.

Charity, from Virginia, says there was a lot of fearmongering around COVID-19. (Jon Michael Raasch/Fox News Digital)

Layla – born with comorbidities – said she is only moderately concerned about contracting monkeypox, but people should respect those in fear. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“I do want to take it seriously,” Layla said. “But seeing how I first heard about it two months ago and it didn’t ramp up in the same way that COVID-19 did, I’m not going to say that I’m going to avoid going everywhere and just stay shut in my house because of it.” 

A New Yorker said she doesn’t “have a lot of energy left to be worried” after enduring more than two years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I mean I wouldn’t want to get it, but I’m not doing anything to not get it,” she said.

Megan Myers reported from New York City and Jon Michael Raasch reported from Alexandria, Virginia.

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Early Signs to Watch For as Virus Spreads in Chicago Area – NBC Chicago

With monkeypox cases continuing to spread in the Chicago area and the outbreak now declared a global emergency by the World Health Organization, what symptoms should you be watching for if you think you may have been exposed?

Experts warned that most who contract monkeypox experience flu-like symptoms before developing a rash, though some may develop a rash first followed by other symptoms, or no other symptoms at all.

The flu-like symptoms may include fever, headache, muscle aches and backache, sore throat, cough, swollen lymph nodes, chills, or exhaustion.

“Suspected cases may present with early flu-like symptoms and progress to lesions that may begin on one site on the body and spread to other parts,” CDPH previously stated.

Dr. Irfan Hafiz, an infectious disease specialist with Northwestern Medicine’s McHenry and Huntley hospitals, said the virus causes symptoms that are similar to several maladies, including chickenpox or smallpox.

“It can, to the layperson, look like chickenpox or warts,” he previously said. “But these (sores) tend to be in exposed areas.”

Health experts also stated the illness can be confused with a sexually transmitted infection like syphilis or herpes, or with varicella zoster virus.

Typically, symptoms start within three weeks of exposure to the virus, health officials said, with most infections lasting between two and four weeks long.

“Anyone with a new or unexplained rash or a rash that looks like monkeypox should talk with their healthcare provider, even if they don’t think they had contact with someone who has monkeypox,” DuPage County health officials said in a statement. “Avoid close contact (including intimate physical contact) with others until a healthcare provider examines you.”

Illinois has reported more than 340 cases in the state so far and on Monday, DuPage County health officials reported an additional four cases.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 16,000 cases of monkeypox have been reported in 74 countries since about May. To date, monkeypox deaths have only been reported in Africa, where a more dangerous version of the virus is spreading, mainly in Nigeria and Congo.

Still, the expanding outbreak is an “extraordinary” situation that qualifies as a global emergency, the World Health Organization chief said Saturday, a declaration that could spur further investment in treating the once-rare disease and worsen the scramble for scarce vaccines.

A global emergency is WHO’s highest level of alert but the designation does not necessarily mean a disease is particularly transmissible or lethal. Similar declarations were made for the Zika virus in 2016 in Latin America and the ongoing effort to eradicate polio, in addition to the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

“We have an outbreak that has spread around the world rapidly through new modes of transmission, about which we understand too little,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. “I know this has not been an easy or straightforward process and that there are divergent views.”

So how does the virus spread and how can someone contract it?

In Africa, monkeypox mainly spreads to people by infected wild animals like rodents in limited outbreaks that typically have not crossed borders. In Europe, North America and elsewhere, however, monkeypox is spreading among people with no links to animals or recent travel to Africa.

WHO’s top monkeypox expert, Dr. Rosamund Lewis, said this week that 99% of all the monkeypox cases beyond Africa were in men and that of those, 98% involved men who have sex with men. Experts suspect the monkeypox outbreaks in Europe and North America were spread via sex at two raves in Belgium and Spain.

Person-to-person transmission is possible through “close physical contact with monkeypox sores, items that have been contaminated with fluids or sores (clothing, bedding, etc.), or through respiratory droplets following prolonged face-to-face contact,” according to the Chicago Department of Public Health.

“I want to emphasize that monkey pox is not COVID,” Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said. “We’ve all been paying attention to COVID for a number of years now. You’ll hear some more details, but this really does take, based on everything we know now, close and generally intimate contact.”

She added that “most cases where we’re seeing this are coming from much more intimate skin to skin contact or kissing.”

According to Dr. Sharon Welbel, director of hospital epidemiology and infection control at Cook County Health, the virus does not typically spread simply from “bumping up against somebody.”

“The way it typically seems to happen is that there is a lesion and it bursts or its opened up and it gets into a scratch or something one can’t even see but a crack in the skin,” she said. “It is not by bumping up against somebody, being in the same room as somebody, sharing a seat with somebody.”

She noted that it “general takes prolonged contact.”

Experts have cautioned that there is no current evidence to suggest the virus is airborne.

Dr. Amu Hazra, an infectious disease physician with Howard Brown Health, said that while a majority of cases have been in men who have sex with men, “the virus doesn’t care how you identify.”

Two children have been diagnosed with monkeypox in the U.S., health officials said Friday. In addition to the two pediatric cases, health officials said they were aware of at least eight women among the more than 2,800 U.S. cases reported so far.

Vaccine supply is extremely limited in Chicago, as only 5,400 doses are available across the city. More than 15,000 doses are soon expected from the federal government, along with another 2,600 from the state of Illinois.

“We’re doing everything we can to prioritize vaccinations for those most at risk, but the truth is, given the very limited national supply… there will be tens of thousands of individuals that are eligible and won’t gain access,” said Howard Brown Health CEO and President David Ernesto Munar.

Currently, you are eligible for the two-dose vaccine if you have had close physical contact with a confirmed case or if you’re a man who has had sex with another man and have done so in a social or sexual venue. Additionally, those who received money in exchange for sex or have had sex with anonymous partners are eligible.

The CDC has recommended the Jynneos vaccine for men who report more than four male sexual partners within the past 14 days.

As of last week, the U.S. had distributed 156,000 doses of the Jynneos vaccine to states and ramped up testing capacity to 70,000 tests per week. Many cities and states are offering vaccine doses to people with known or presumed exposure to the virus, including men who have sex with men and transgender, gender nonconforming or nonbinary residents with multiple sexual partners. 

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