Monkeypox concerns heightened with new case in U.S.

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More cases of monkeypox reported, but is there cause for alarm?

More cases of monkeypox were reported on Monday with Washington state reporting its first case. The news of human to human transmission has alarmed many people, but KTVU's Jana Katsuyama spoke with an infectious disease expert at UCSF who studied the virus. He talks about the similarities of the virus to chicken pox.

A new suspected case of monkeypox has been identified in the Seattle area, where a man who traveled abroad was being tested Monday for the virus. 

The monkeypox virus, which has usually been confined to Africa and transmitted to humans from animals such as monkeys, squirrels, and rodents, has been spreading to at least 12 countries outside of Africa with about 200 confirmed and suspected cases according to the World Health Organization.

The concern is it appears to be from human-to-human transmission, possibly sexual transmission between men at a Gay Pride event that drew 80,000 people to Spain's Canary Islands, as well as parties in Germany and Belgium.

"I've heard from friends in Belgium it was spreading at a different festival that was spreading in different communities," said Alex Wauters of San Francisco resident.

UCSF infectious disease expert Dr. Seth Blumberg studied the monkeypox in the Democratic Republic of Congo and says it's important people recognize the symptoms.

"Monkeypox and chicken pox are actually quite similar, in the sense they are both associated with fever and a rash that comes across your whole body," said Dr. Blumberg, "Thankfully the big difference is monkeypox is not nearly as deadly as smallpox."

Dr. Blumberg says another factor that makes monkeypox less of a threat than COVID-19 is the monkeypox virus usually takes longer for someone to be infectious than the coronavirus.

"Typically 2-3 weeks versus for COVID it can be a few days," said Dr. Blumberg.

Dr. David Heymann, who formerly headed WHO's emergencies department, told The Associated Press that the leading theory to explain the spread of the disease was sexual transmission at raves held in Spain and Belgium.

"We know monkeypox can spread when there is close contact with the lesions of someone who is infected, and it looks like sexual contact has now amplified that transmission," said Heymann. 
  That marks a significant departure from the disease's typical pattern of spread in central and western Africa, where people are mainly infected by animals like wild rodents and primates and outbreaks have not spilled across borders.

The WHO says it highlights how interconnected the world is and the need for coordination.

In San Francisco, with more foreign travelers, and large sporting events, concerts and Pride approaching, health experts hope people will be careful.

"As long as people are aware of how the disease spreads and are able to make choices that are safe for themselves and others despite these big events, then the spread won't be so severe here," said Gillian Shub of San Francisco.

"We just went through a pandemic right. I think a big part of that is people weren't taking the right precautions, and we didn't have enough information up front, so whatever we could do to prevent that," said Ankit Guha of Oakland.

Health officials say most of the known cases in Europe have been among men who have sex with men, but anyone can be infected through close contact with a sick person, their clothing or bedsheets. Scientists say it will be difficult to disentangle whether the spread is being driven by sex or merely close contact. 

"By nature, sexual activity involves intimate contact, which one would expect to increase the likelihood of transmission, whatever a person's sexual orientation and irrespective of the mode of transmission," said Mike Skinner, a virologist at Imperial College London. 

On Monday, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control Director Andrea Ammon said "the likelihood of further spread of the virus through close contact, for example during sexual activities among persons with multiple sexual partners, is considered to be high." 

To date, WHO has recorded more than 90 cases of monkeypox in a dozen countries including Canada, Spain, Israel, France, Switzerland, the U.S. and Australia. 

On Monday, Denmark announced its first case, Portugal revised its total upwards to 37, Italy reported one further infection and Britain added 37 more cases. 

U.S. health officials said Monday they knew of one confirmed case, in the state of Massachusetts, and four probable cases -- two in Utah, one in Florida and one in New York City. All were men who had traveled outside the U.S.

Germany has four confirmed cases linked to exposure at "party events ... where sexual activity took place" in Spain's Canary Islands and in Berlin, according to a government report to lawmakers obtained by the AP. 

Madrid's senior health official said Monday that the Spanish capital had 30 confirmed cases. Enrique Ruiz Escudero said authorities are investigating possible links between a recent Gay Pride event in the Canary Islands, which drew some 80,000 people, and cases at a Madrid sauna. 

The monkeypox cases so far have been mild, with no deaths reported. Typically, the virus causes fever, chills, rash and lesions on the face or genitals. Most people recover within several weeks without requiring hospitalization. 

SEE ALSO: Monkeypox likely spread by sex at 2 raves in Europe, expert says

Vaccines against smallpox, a related disease, are effective in preventing monkeypox and some antiviral drugs are being developed. In recent years, the illness has been fatal in up to 6% of infections. 

Heymann chaired an urgent meeting of WHO's advisory group on infectious disease threats on Friday to assess the outbreak and said there was no evidence to suggest that monkeypox had mutated into a more infectious form. 

The U.N. agency said the outbreak is "a highly unusual event" and said the fact that cases are being seen in so many different countries suggests the virus may have been silently spreading for some time. The agency's Europe director warned that festivals and parties could accelerate spread. 

Still, at a public session on Monday, WHO officials described the outbreak as "containable" and cautioned against stigmatizing affected groups, saying the disease can infect anyone.

The agency said the cases appeared to be linked to a monkeypox virus that was first detected in exported cases from Nigeria to Britain, Israel and Singapore in 2018 and 2019.

Authorities in Britain, Spain and Portugal have said most of the cases identified so far were in young men whose infections were picked up when they sought help for lesions at sexual health clinics. 

Heymann, who is also a professor of infectious diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the monkeypox outbreak was likely a random event that might be traceable to a single infection. 

"It's very possible there was somebody who got infected, developed lesions on the genitals, hands or somewhere else, and then spread it to others when there was sexual or close, physical contact," Heymann hypothesized. "And then there were these international events that seeded the outbreak around the world, into the U.S. and other European countries." 

He emphasized that the disease was unlikely to trigger widespread transmission. 

"This is not COVID," he said. "We need to slow it down, but it does not spread in the air and we have vaccines to protect against it." 

Heymann said studies should be conducted rapidly to determine if monkeypox could be spread by people without symptoms and that populations at risk of the disease should take precautions to protect themselves. 
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 AP writer Maria Cheng, Barry Hatton in Lisbon, Portugal, and Frank Jordans and Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin, contributed to this report.