MNKYPOX Monkeypox - Consolidated Thread.

TxGal

Day by day
Reading the thread, and seeing what everyone says about what medications to have on hand to treat this thing, I'd like to know what would be the best option if I were to want one good medication to stock up on. I already have a stock of benadryl anti-itch cream, tea tree essential oil, clove essential oil, neosporin, and lavendar essential oil. I also have plaintain growing like crazy in a section of my backyard. I would like one basic one, though, above all these if there is anything better out there. I just edited to add, what about Calamine lotion? My mom swore by that stuff on poison ivy.

If the government plans to use some form of COVID to lock us down again this Fall, I don't know how many will pay attention this time, but combined with monkeypox, that might do the trick using a greater fear factor. Even though, monkeypox isn't really deadly, who would want to catch it seeing what it could do to a person?
When I had the shingles last year, I think it was, I bought cremes/gels/lotions specifically for shingles. Didn't get much relief from any of them, so I went back to Calamine lotion. The goal is to dry the blisters as soon as possible. Once they crusted and fell off, I then put neosporin on most of them. I, too, grew up using Calamine lotion for poison ivy, and I used to get it a lot.

Don't wait too long to get Calamine lotion, DH had a heck of a time finding any back then. Don't forget cotton balls, too. I need to add more of both to our shopping list, thanks for the reminder!
 
Last edited:

TxGal

Day by day
You have to make your decisions for yourself. That said, a few nurses have recommended that I ditch neosporin, and replace it with bacitracin.

Any idea why they said to do that? I grew up in a military family, and we used bacitracin for all of our cuts, abrasions, etc. Any scars we got from those childhood mishaps rarely, if ever, were large scars. I always thought it was due to the bacitracin.

Nowadays it's really hard to find any bacitracin, if at all...neosporin is everywhere, it seems.
 

OldArcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Monkey pox may only be a precursor of what the Communist Chinese intend. In error, I posted this under “Pandemic.” It is, I believe, germane to the Monkey Pox thread:

Did you know that there are 83 poxes, divided amongst 22 genera, and those divided into 2 sub-families? The latest to appear is monkey pox. What about camel pox and small pox? Too early to see if monkey pox was weaponized/human engineered. As it has been seldom seen, one has to wonder if it is yet another gift of Wuhan, and those wonderful folks seeking our deaths and subjugation, the Chinese People’s Republic. Is weaponized small pox, known to have been “perfected” years ago, waiting in the wings? One would expect other poxes to be tested/targeted on populations not amicable to China, preparing for a global onslaught, to leave China, and it’s genetically acceptable future subjects with free reign, and lords of all they see?

Time will tell…

OA
 

SouthernBreeze

Has No Life - Lives on TB
For people like me who are working inside the broad national response to monkeypox, there are loud echoes of the earliest days of Covid-19 and, longer ago, of AIDS. But understanding the country’s capacity to contain monkeypox requires an examination of the STI epidemic that the nation has ignored for years, which is why these diseases continue to be out of control.

I was reading back over the thread, and this is the only thing I could find that says anything about something being out of control. The article is talking about STI's being out of control.
 

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Gut tells me we are seeing the vaccinated start to pop a lot faster.

Got to say.....genius management on the part of the perpetrators.


Haven't been able to find any data that would corroborate that (if you were referring to the CV-Jab)

Which is completely unsurprising, in all honesty.
Wouldn't want to panic the Herd.

Attenuated Immune systems = Outbreaks... And from what we've been reading, a number of Scientists and Doctors believe the Jab attenuates general natural immune systems...
 

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Monkey pox may only be a precursor of what the Communist Chinese intend. In error, I posted this under “Pandemic.” It is, I believe, germane to the Monkey Pox thread:

Did you know that there are 83 poxes, divided amongst 22 genera, and those divided into 2 sub-families? The latest to appear is monkey pox. What about camel pox and small pox? Too early to see if monkey pox was weaponized/human engineered. As it has been seldom seen, one has to wonder if it is yet another gift of Wuhan, and those wonderful folks seeking our deaths and subjugation, the Chinese People’s Republic. Is weaponized small pox, known to have been “perfected” years ago, waiting in the wings? One would expect other poxes to be tested/targeted on populations not amicable to China, preparing for a global onslaught, to leave China, and it’s genetically acceptable future subjects with free reign, and lords of all they see?

Time will tell…

OA


Dr. John Campbell did a vid on Youtube about Monkeypox being 'Studied' in Wuhan...

He exhibits exceptional British reserve in that one.
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I was reading back over the thread, and this is the only thing I could find that says anything about something being out of control. The article is talking about STI's being out of control.

I was referring to what the CDC themselves said, today/yesterday in an article which was then posted on Twitter.
 

amarah

Contributing Member
I stocked up on s purpurea tincture.Got mine from amish ways.net,but they are so swamped they put orders on hold.I still see alot available on etsy.
 

bracketquant

Veteran Member
Any idea why they said to do that? I grew up in a military family, and we used bacitracin for all of our cuts, abrasions, etc. Any scars we got from those childhood mishaps rarely, if ever, were large scars. I always thought it was due to the bacitracin.

Nowadays it's really hard to find any bacitracin, if at all...neosporin is everywhere, it seems.
The nurses say that neosporin is not effective against MRSA, which they deal with often, and that bacitracin is effective. Also, there appears to be skin irritation related side effects with neosporin.

There are pros and cons likely with all antibiotics. If inexpensive and available, it would likely be best to have both on hand. That doesn't mean you have to use them. Researching first, is the best way to go, before use.
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The nurses say that neosporin is not effective against MRSA, which they deal with often, and that bacitracin is effective. Also, there appears to be skin irritation related side effects with neosporin.

There are pros and cons likely with all antibiotics. If inexpensive and available, it would likely be best to have both on hand. That doesn't mean you have to use them. Researching first, is the best way to go, before use.
Very interesting to know!
I would never have guessed that about bacitracin!
O think it might be a good idea to have a full stock of each item as precaution.
It’s Not going over board with that, since those are common items anyway.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
The nurses say that neosporin is not effective against MRSA, which they deal with often, and that bacitracin is effective. Also, there appears to be skin irritation related side effects with neosporin.

I have some of that too. My granddaughter has had staph a couple of times, so I stocked up on mupirocin cream. I’m wondering if that will work too. Off to research.

I don't know about for a pox sore, but I was told mupirocin is effective for MRSA (and a quick google search confirms that). I think it's prescription only though.

HD
 

Cacheman

Ultra MAGA!
This tread follows a adult male in the hospital in the UK, who has monkeypox. The thread has a couple of pictures of the disease on his body, and talks about some of the symptoms and the morphine he needs every 3 hours.

View: https://twitter.com/TwisterFilm/status/1537777776962551812
From Thread Reader app so everyone can read it....




Thread by @TwisterFilm on Thread Reader App


10-13 minutes


192 views
Malcolm Clark Profile picture


1./ A friend of mine was hospitalised this week with monkeypox and it makes me wonder what we are NOT being told about the disease. At first his symptoms had been quite light, just like the NHS's medical advice suggests. Then he took a serious turn for the worse.

1 of /20

2./ The NHS may say monkeypox is "usually mild" but this desire to reassure is in danger of encouraging complacency. After a week of flu-like fever my friend's temperature soared and the pain in his limbs became so unbearable he's on morphine every 3 hours. Then this happened.



3./ The old sores aren't drying up as the NHS advice suggests they will. They're seeping because they're infected with bacteria while the virus itself seems to have a second wind. A whole new series of sores is popping up in new locations. He gave me permission to post these.



4./ Above all, his body is racked by pain he describes as excruciating. "I've never felt anything so intense". His hand, for example, feels like it is on fire from the inside. His symptoms may turn out be an exception. But I wouldn't bet my health -or yours- on it.

5./ All we know is that with 524 cases the UK has the biggest single outbreak in history outside Africa. Yet where is the alarm? Where is the sense of urgency to stop the spread of this virus? At least @WHO is about to discuss declaring an emergency.




6./ Some global health experts like @DrEricDing complain @WHO is moving far too slowly. The organisation won't meet to discuss the "emergency" until June 23rd. Why does this sound familiar? Didn't WHO spend weeks discussing whether COVID was a pandemic?

7./ Monkeypox isn't as serious as COVID -so far- but many gay men have been left with the impression this virus is no more than an inconvenience. If it was otherwise they rationalise (understandably) there would be more alarm. There should be.



8./ The virus is doing things we didn't expect. And may do more. An increasing number of cases, for example, like my mate, now report internal ulcers along the lining of the rectum. Have we somehow become so biology averse we can't warn people of this? Will they be offended?‍♂️

9./ In the UK we have over 500 (predominantly) gay and bisexual men infected with a new virus yet Stonewall hasn't tweeted about the outbreak for a month. In the US alarm levels are higher. New York currently has just 10 cases and yet @NYCPride is warning about monkeypox.



10./ The equivalent Instagram of @PrideInLondon where there are hundreds of cases has nothing. Neither has its twitter page, though they do have time to campaign for a Trans Conversion Therapy Ban. Yet there are gay men being hospitalised with a virus. Here and right now.



11./ Public health has to balance the need to warn with the need to avoid panic. This outbreak faces an extra challenge. The LGBTQ+ lobby sees itself -axiomatically- as "sex-positive". Spot the tension this creates in this excellent article by @sharonNYT


12./ The article hints that many public health experts want much greater effort at containment (and more access to and better testing etc). That's what they tell me. But no one wants to "put a damper on the Pride celebrations and their positive messages about sexual identity".



13./ I'm as sex-positive as the next person but the top priority is to warn people properly there's a virus spreading that can cause clusters of bleeding and bacterially-infected lesions that might make your limbs feel they are on fire. Sorry, if that puts a damper on the mood.

14./ Playing the risks down -or ignoring them- is deeply irresponsible and risks putting LGB & TQ+ folks health in danger. Public health officials wouldn't be "urging organisers to issue advice" if they felt this was already happening.



15./ In their desire to stay "sex-positive" and in their lack of alarm public health officials and much of the LGBTQ+ lobby have allowed credence to be given to the notion monkeypox is no big deal. My friend with his ulcerated and bleeding body -inside and out- begs to differ.

16./ The @CDCgov even put out health advice for people that suggested one way to avoid transmission of the virus was to keep your clothes on during sex. How about just rescheduling your sex party for a few weeks given that the incubation period for monkeypox is 21 days?



17./ So far advice has also allowed the impression to be given there are widely available anti-virals that will treat monkeypox. My friend was told those are in such short supply he might not get them. Apparently, they are only stockpiled for MPs and other public officials.

18./ When the outbreak began -he was told- there was only enough in store in the UK to counter the use of smallpox as a biological weapon by treating the government itself. Who knows how true this is but my friend's doctors have been unable to access them. So far.

19./ It shouldn't matter but my friend is particularly gutted because he is so careful about his health. He was still working from home -wary of COVID. His boyfriend caught monkeypox and passed it on. That's him off my Xmas card list. Doctors reckon he caught it a month ago.

20./ I hope in a month's time we don't see more people hospitalised. If there are we can blame the lack of urgency among health officials and the fact LGBTQ+ groups failed to face a historic challenge. When it came to gay men's health they had so many other pressing priorities.


• • •
 

phloydius

Veteran Member
The nurses say that neosporin is not effective against MRSA, which they deal with often, and that bacitracin is effective.

I'm not saying the nurses are wrong, because I haven't looked into it very far to find out (so I could very likely be wrong), but... It was my understanding that bacitracin is only a single antibiotic, and Neosporin contains three antibiotics: bacitracin, polymyxin and neomycin. Did the nurses say why bacitracin by itself without the other two is effective? Would be grateful for any further information you can provide.
 

jward

passin' thru
Please don't try to find the teeet lol
..was it this NBC article? I recall another of theirs in early june that stated if the # infected didn't rise over another 1k or so by the 8th, it was in control...but if it hit 4k by that time frame it was not. IIRC we were ok, by those standards, then.


June 28, 2022, 7:15 PM CDT
By Lauren Dunn and Benjamin Ryan
As cases of monkeypox virus surge in the U.S., the Biden administration will start distributing the monkeypox vaccine across the country, focusing on people most at risk and communities with the highest numbers of cases, White House officials announced Tuesday.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will send 56,000 doses of the Jynneos vaccine immediately to areas with high transmission. An additional 240,000 doses will be distributed over the next few weeks, with even more to come this summer and fall. Officials expect to make at least 1.6 million doses available by the end of the fall.

States with the highest numbers of cases include California, New York, Illinois and Florida, as well as Washington, D.C., according to the latest count from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
People lined up outside of Department of Health & Mental Hygiene clinic on June 23, 2022 in New York, as NYC makes vaccines available to residents possibly exposed to monkeypox.
People lined up outside of Department of Health & Mental Hygiene clinic on June 23, 2022 in New York, as NYC makes vaccines available to residents possibly exposed to monkeypox.Tayfun Coskun / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
"We are recommending that vaccines be provided to both people with known monkeypox exposures who are contacted by public health and also to those people who’ve been recently exposed to monkeypox,” the CDC’s director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, said at a news briefing Tuesday.
The CDC is prioritizing initial access to the vaccine for people who have been in close contact, including sexual contact, with someone who has diagnosed with the virus. The agency will also provide vaccines to men who have sex with men who report having had multiple recent sex partners at a venue or party where the virus is known to have spread, or who have had sex with multiple partners in an area of the country with elevated spread.
The vast majority of confirmed monkeypox cases, both in the U.S. and in the global outbreak as a whole, have been among men who have sex with men.
While case numbers continue to rise in the U.S., the White House Covid-19 coordinator, Dr. Ashish Jha, seemed hopeful the U.S. could contain the outbreak and said it was important to remain vigilant.
“Monkeypox is not novel,” Jha said at the briefing. “We as a global community have known about it for decades. We know how it spreads. We have tests that help identify people who are infected. We have vaccines that are highly effective against it.”
The U.S. monkeypox outbreak was first detected in Massachusetts in May, after a person who had been traveling tested positive. Since then, the virus has been spreading around the country, with more than 306 cases in 28 states, according to the CDC. But because of limitations with testing for the virus, it’s likely the U.S. is significantly undercounting the numbers of infections, experts say.
“We’ve already lost control of this outbreak,” said David Harvey, the executive director of the National Coalition of STD Directors. “We think there’s many more cases, and we need to act now to get control of this outbreak.”
New York City and Washington, D.C., were among the first cities to begin vaccinating at-risk groups for monkeypox, including men who have sex with men reporting multiple partners or at least one anonymous partner within 14 days. With just 1,000 doses from the CDC to distribute at one clinic, New York, which began administering shots on June 23, quickly ran out.

It was a similar situation in Washington, where health officials announced Monday that they would also start vaccinating at-risk groups. The 300 available appointments were taken in less than an hour after the online booking system went live.



Number of monkeypox patients are gay and bi-sexual men
June 27, 202205:54

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The Biden administration's vaccine strategy is welcome, but questions remain about how the doses will make it to "those most at-risk in an equitable way," NCSD's Harvey said in a statement after the briefing.

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The two-dose Jynneos vaccine, which is approved by the Food and Drug Administration, not only prevents infection, but it can also be used to stop an infection after a person is exposed. Walensky said that people should get vaccinated within two weeks of exposure but that the vaccine works better the sooner it’s given. The doses are given 28 days apart.

An older vaccine that is FDA-approved for smallpox but also protects against monkeypox is also available, but it isn’t recommended because it can’t be given to anyone who is immunocompromised, or people with HIV.

The virus is marked by a rash that looks like pimples or blisters, along with symptoms like fever, headache, muscle aches, swollen lymph nodes and chills. Symptoms typically begin seven to 14 days after exposure, but they may start earlier or as late as 21 days after exposure.

In the current outbreak, the monkeypox virus is being spread primarily through intimate contact, including sex and prolonged face-to-face interactions, Dr. Jennifer McQuiston, the deputy director of the CDC’s High Consequence Pathogens and Pathology Division, said at the briefing.

Can monkeypox outbreak be stopped?
Epidemiologists who have studied monkeypox are concerned that the CDC’s numbers don’t reflect the true scope of the outbreak and that the U.S. may be reacting too slowly to stop case numbers from escalating.

“I am quite concerned that given how hard it still is for people to get tested and how difficult it may be for clinicians to recognize who is infected that our official tally of monkeypox cases is a significant undercount of the true number of infections,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, the director of the pandemic center and a professor of epidemiology at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. “We urgently need to increase access to testing, vaccines and therapeutic drugs.”


Walensky said Tuesday that public health and commercial labs can process up to 10,000 tests a week and that HHS plans even more. One challenge is that there is no rapid test yet similar to what is used to diagnose Covid.




WHO warns monkeypox must be contained before it becomes global issue
June 9, 202201:42

Even with delays in testing, epidemiologist Anne W. Rimoin, the director of the UCLA Center for Global and Immigrant Health, said it’s not too late to bring the outbreak under control.
“We have the ability to bring this under control using the public health tools needed- including case identification, contact tracing and testing,” Rimoin said in an email. "We need rapid scale up of diagnostics that are widely available to be able to have good situational awareness of where we truly are in terms of case numbers.”

There are at least 4,700 confirmed cases of monkeypox in 49 countries, Walensky said. The World Health Organization said Saturday that monkeypox didn't yet constitute a global health emergency, but Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement that there were serious concerns about the "scale and speed of the current outbreak."
Lauren Dunn
Lauren Dunn is a senior producer with the NBC News medical unit in New Y


I am 100% sure I read a teeet this morning quoting a CDC official stating, that the spread “is out of control”
I’m wracking my brain, but after work will try to find that.
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I'm not saying the nurses are wrong, because I haven't looked into it very far to find out (so I could very likely be wrong), but... It was my understanding that bacitracin is only a single antibiotic, and Neosporin contains three antibiotics: bacitracin, polymyxin and neomycin. Did the nurses say why bacitracin by itself without the other two is effective? Would be grateful for any further information you can provide.
Yeah same here!
I want to know too
 

bracketquant

Veteran Member
I'm not saying the nurses are wrong, because I haven't looked into it very far to find out (so I could very likely be wrong), but... It was my understanding that bacitracin is only a single antibiotic, and Neosporin contains three antibiotics: bacitracin, polymyxin and neomycin. Did the nurses say why bacitracin by itself without the other two is effective? Would be grateful for any further information you can provide.
One nurse got her info from a very long time nurse (now retired) whom the first nurse would trust the other if her life depended on it. I'm wondering if the triple antibiotic, way back when, didn't contain bacitracin at the time. I haven't seen either in a few years. And, I have no other info to provide.

On a side note, while attending to my 90+ year old mother 24/7 for several years, I had the opportunity to talk to many visiting nurses. I asked them about what they had in their first aid kits at home (knowing that a store bought "kit" was mostly useless). Not ONE nurse had a home first aid kit. I suppose they all believed they could just take a family member to the hospital, if it came to treatment.
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Please don't try to find the teeet lol
..was it this NBC article? I recall another of theirs in early june that stated if the # infected didn't rise over another 1k or so by the 8th, it was in control...but if it hit 4k by that time frame it was not. IIRC we were ok, by those standards, then.


June 28, 2022, 7:15 PM CDT
By Lauren Dunn and Benjamin Ryan
As cases of monkeypox virus surge in the U.S., the Biden administration will start distributing the monkeypox vaccine across the country, focusing on people most at risk and communities with the highest numbers of cases, White House officials announced Tuesday.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will send 56,000 doses of the Jynneos vaccine immediately to areas with high transmission. An additional 240,000 doses will be distributed over the next few weeks, with even more to come this summer and fall. Officials expect to make at least 1.6 million doses available by the end of the fall.

States with the highest numbers of cases include California, New York, Illinois and Florida, as well as Washington, D.C., according to the latest count from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
People lined up outside of Department of Health & Mental Hygiene clinic on June 23, 2022 in New York, as NYC makes vaccines available to residents possibly exposed to monkeypox.
People lined up outside of Department of Health & Mental Hygiene clinic on June 23, 2022 in New York, as NYC makes vaccines available to residents possibly exposed to monkeypox.Tayfun Coskun / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
"We are recommending that vaccines be provided to both people with known monkeypox exposures who are contacted by public health and also to those people who’ve been recently exposed to monkeypox,” the CDC’s director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, said at a news briefing Tuesday.
The CDC is prioritizing initial access to the vaccine for people who have been in close contact, including sexual contact, with someone who has diagnosed with the virus. The agency will also provide vaccines to men who have sex with men who report having had multiple recent sex partners at a venue or party where the virus is known to have spread, or who have had sex with multiple partners in an area of the country with elevated spread.
The vast majority of confirmed monkeypox cases, both in the U.S. and in the global outbreak as a whole, have been among men who have sex with men.
While case numbers continue to rise in the U.S., the White House Covid-19 coordinator, Dr. Ashish Jha, seemed hopeful the U.S. could contain the outbreak and said it was important to remain vigilant.
“Monkeypox is not novel,” Jha said at the briefing. “We as a global community have known about it for decades. We know how it spreads. We have tests that help identify people who are infected. We have vaccines that are highly effective against it.”
The U.S. monkeypox outbreak was first detected in Massachusetts in May, after a person who had been traveling tested positive. Since then, the virus has been spreading around the country, with more than 306 cases in 28 states, according to the CDC. But because of limitations with testing for the virus, it’s likely the U.S. is significantly undercounting the numbers of infections, experts say.
“We’ve already lost control of this outbreak,” said David Harvey, the executive director of the National Coalition of STD Directors. “We think there’s many more cases, and we need to act now to get control of this outbreak.”
New York City and Washington, D.C., were among the first cities to begin vaccinating at-risk groups for monkeypox, including men who have sex with men reporting multiple partners or at least one anonymous partner within 14 days. With just 1,000 doses from the CDC to distribute at one clinic, New York, which began administering shots on June 23, quickly ran out.

It was a similar situation in Washington, where health officials announced Monday that they would also start vaccinating at-risk groups. The 300 available appointments were taken in less than an hour after the online booking system went live.



Number of monkeypox patients are gay and bi-sexual men
June 27, 202205:54

Get the Morning Rundown
Get a head start on the morning's top stories.

This site is protected by recaptcha Privacy Policy | Terms of Service

The Biden administration's vaccine strategy is welcome, but questions remain about how the doses will make it to "those most at-risk in an equitable way," NCSD's Harvey said in a statement after the briefing.

Recommended

Abortion RightsState abortion bans trigger confusion over what happens to frozen embryos

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The two-dose Jynneos vaccine, which is approved by the Food and Drug Administration, not only prevents infection, but it can also be used to stop an infection after a person is exposed. Walensky said that people should get vaccinated within two weeks of exposure but that the vaccine works better the sooner it’s given. The doses are given 28 days apart.

An older vaccine that is FDA-approved for smallpox but also protects against monkeypox is also available, but it isn’t recommended because it can’t be given to anyone who is immunocompromised, or people with HIV.

The virus is marked by a rash that looks like pimples or blisters, along with symptoms like fever, headache, muscle aches, swollen lymph nodes and chills. Symptoms typically begin seven to 14 days after exposure, but they may start earlier or as late as 21 days after exposure.

In the current outbreak, the monkeypox virus is being spread primarily through intimate contact, including sex and prolonged face-to-face interactions, Dr. Jennifer McQuiston, the deputy director of the CDC’s High Consequence Pathogens and Pathology Division, said at the briefing.

Can monkeypox outbreak be stopped?
Epidemiologists who have studied monkeypox are concerned that the CDC’s numbers don’t reflect the true scope of the outbreak and that the U.S. may be reacting too slowly to stop case numbers from escalating.

“I am quite concerned that given how hard it still is for people to get tested and how difficult it may be for clinicians to recognize who is infected that our official tally of monkeypox cases is a significant undercount of the true number of infections,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, the director of the pandemic center and a professor of epidemiology at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. “We urgently need to increase access to testing, vaccines and therapeutic drugs.”


Walensky said Tuesday that public health and commercial labs can process up to 10,000 tests a week and that HHS plans even more. One challenge is that there is no rapid test yet similar to what is used to diagnose Covid.




WHO warns monkeypox must be contained before it becomes global issue
June 9, 202201:42

Even with delays in testing, epidemiologist Anne W. Rimoin, the director of the UCLA Center for Global and Immigrant Health, said it’s not too late to bring the outbreak under control.
“We have the ability to bring this under control using the public health tools needed- including case identification, contact tracing and testing,” Rimoin said in an email. "We need rapid scale up of diagnostics that are widely available to be able to have good situational awareness of where we truly are in terms of case numbers.”

There are at least 4,700 confirmed cases of monkeypox in 49 countries, Walensky said. The World Health Organization said Saturday that monkeypox didn't yet constitute a global health emergency, but Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement that there were serious concerns about the "scale and speed of the current outbreak."
Lauren Dunn
Lauren Dunn is a senior producer with the NBC News medical unit in New Y

Thais the one!!
Thank you’
 

bracketquant

Veteran Member
That is beyond idiotic. I'm not in medicine, and I have a first aid kit at home and in the car.
It likely has a lot to do with this area of the country, Massachusetts. (Supposedly) it is the state with both the best and the most medical care in the country. Outside of a few rural areas in this small state, there are probably multiple hospitals within a 20 mile radius of just about everyone. Also, with the (supposedly) highest educated population in the US, there is just no telling such people that they are being foolish. They all know better (and arrogantly know the're better), than someone else.
 

John Deere Girl

Veteran Member
One nurse got her info from a very long time nurse (now retired) whom the first nurse would trust the other if her life depended on it. I'm wondering if the triple antibiotic, way back when, didn't contain bacitracin at the time. I haven't seen either in a few years. And, I have no other info to provide.

On a side note, while attending to my 90+ year old mother 24/7 for several years, I had the opportunity to talk to many visiting nurses. I asked them about what they had in their first aid kits at home (knowing that a store bought "kit" was mostly useless). Not ONE nurse had a home first aid kit. I suppose they all believed they could just take a family member to the hospital, if it came to treatment.
Wow! Our son is a nurse and keeps a first aid in his vehicle and at home.
 

jward

passin' thru
First probable case of monkeypox identified in New Hampshire
Today, 03:36 PM
Source: https://www.wmur.com/article/probabl...hire/40462492#

First probable case of monkeypox identified in New Hampshire
Rare illness recently has been found in 26 states
WMUR Updated: 3:55 PM EDT Jun 29, 2022

CONCORD, N.H. —

The first probable case of monkeypox in New Hampshire has been identified, health officials said Wednesday.

The patient is a resident of Rockingham County, and the Department of Health and Human Services said that because of privacy concerns, no further information about the patient would be released...
 
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