Agreed.
Last time it was 2 weeks to flatten the curve.
This time, it might be just a little longer until the vaccines arrive.
Must be the check to Not-A-Doctor Tedros cleared.!!!!!!!! BREAKING: WHO declares highest alert over monkeypox
The monkeypox outbreak has been declared a global health emergency by the World Health Organization.
WHO declares highest alert over monkeypox
Monkeypox is a global health emergency, says the World Health Organization, after a surge in cases.www.bbc.com
The classification is the highest alert that the WHO can issue and follows a worldwide upsurge in cases.
It came at the end of the second meeting of the WHO's emergency committee on the virus.
More than 16,000 cases have now been reported from 75 countries, said WHO director general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
There had been five deaths so far as a result of the outbreak, he added.
There are only two other such health emergencies at present - the coronavirus pandemic and the continuing effort to eradicate polio.
Dr Tedros said the emergency committee had been unable to reach a consensus on whether the monkeypox outbreak should be classified as a global health emergency.
However, he said the outbreak had spread around the world rapidly and he had decided that it was indeed of international concern.
"The WHO's assessment is that the risk of monkeypox is moderate globally and in all regions, except in the European region, where we assess the risk as high," he added.
1-5 meters is a lot more than the COVID 6 feet!I don't know if I have ever read a report of it being detected in the air, however I never looked. Up until about 2-3 months ago, Monkeypox was considered "airborne" (more accurate to say aerosolized), because it was believed to be transmissible via the air by the CDC, WHO, etc.
This is important enough to copy two important quotes from the tweet / report here (incase the tweet disappears):
Yesterday, the @WHO claimed: “FACT: The #monkeypox virus is NOT airborne”
“Detection of MPXV DNA in air samples collected at distances of greater than 1·5m from the patient and at a height of nearly 2m supports the theory that MPXV can be present in (...) aerosols”
1-5 meters is a lot more than the COVID 6 feet!
Monkeypox was being ignored as cover for gays. Everything is political.
The world will not lockdown for what is currently basically a voluntary homosexual disease.
The world will not lockdown for what is currently basically a voluntary homosexual disease.
No way, the CDC …used that word??!
Guess what one of the top Twitter searches is right now?? Yep.
lockdowns….Trudeau ain’t wasting any time is he?
View: https://mobile.twitter.com/Trudeaus_Ego/status/1550977880854773764
You sure?I think that is a satire twitter feed.
You sure?
I’ve no idea, I just saw it and posted. If it IS satire, my apologies.
WHO Declares a PHEIC Over Monkeypox
Their unvaccinated 6-year-old daughter had about 90 lesions and was in a coma for 12 days."
So are you saying the fags at Project Lincoln were molesting children?This is "interesting" did the gaming involve deliberately seeding children?
U.S. Ministry of Truth
@USMiniTru
BREAKING: Elementary Schools in 20-mile radius of @ProjectLincoln reporting Monkeypox outbreak.
7:35 PM · Jul 23, 2022·Twitter for Android
loveproud @AdamClinard1
Jul 21
@Lysol do you know or have you done testing to determine if Lysol kills monkeypox virus?
WTF is Project Lincoln?So are you saying the fags at Project Lincoln were molesting children?
I believe they are known homosexuals activists.WTF is Project Lincoln?
Doctors are really going to need to think out of the box they're in to halt the spread.[Note: Did not copy the entire article, it is very long. Only copied some of the more interesting quotes]Lesions and Debilitating Pain: A California Man Describes His Experience With Monkeypox
Dead ends and delays plagued Kevin Kwong’s search for a diagnosis.laist.com
Lesions and Debilitating Pain: A California Man Describes His Experience With Monkeypox
“Everything started rapidly getting worse,” Kwong said. “I started to get more spots on my face, more redness and [the spots] started leaking fluid. The rash expanded to my elbows and my hands and my ankles.”
Kwong initially treated the rash himself with the topical steroids he uses for eczema. When that didn’t work, he made his first virtual visit from his home in Emeryville, California. The nurse diagnosed him with herpes, and prescribed an antiviral medication.
Over the next few hours the rash quickly spread to more of his body. Alarmed, Kwong went in person to an urgent care clinic. The doctor agreed with the herpes diagnosis, and added another — scabies.
“My spots were concentrated on my hands and my wrists and feet and elbows, which are prime locations for scabies,” Kwong said.
The urgent care doctor didn’t think it was monkeypox — Kwong’s spots were clustered together and looked different from the monkeypox rash pictures the doctor had seen.
During another virtual appointment in the middle of the night, a nurse noticed the rash had spread toward his eyes and told him to go to the emergency room immediately. It was there that doctors said Kwong may have monkeypox. But they were unprepared to handle a potential case.
“They were researching while I was in this [patient] room, and back and forth on the phone at the CDC. I expected myself, as a patient, to be in the dark, but I didn't realize how little information was also given to providers and how unprepared they were as well,” he said.
He said the pain was inescapable.
“I estimated 600 to 800 tiny sores," he said. "And it's just sort of under the surface of your skin, there's like a small piece of your flesh being taken out and deteriorating. It feels like [when] you stick your hand in water that's too hot, sort of that feeling but you cannot take it out. And so it's constant."
Because the rash was close to Kwong’s eyes, if left untreated it could have caused him to go blind. Dr. Chin-Hong said the case was so severe the hospital okayed a prescription of TPOXX. That’s an antiviral that’s been given special clearance by the FDA to treat monkeypox only in certain circumstances.
Despite Kwong’s quick turnaround on the antiviral, he still hasn’t tested positive. Chin-Hong says health workers may not have rubbed hard enough to get live cells for the monkeypox test.
“It's very difficult as a clinician to really get a good sample in these kinds of lesions because the patient is often in pain. And you don't like to see people suffer,” Chin-Hong said.