Los Angeles Times

Monkeypox spread at two large parties, L.A. County officials say

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observed that some recent cases have been among men who have sex with men.

But officials have emphasized that anyone can get or transmit monkeypox, including family and friends caring for those who are ill. The virus also can be transmitte­d through shared bedding and clothing. It’s also possible it can be spread through kissing and breathing at very close range.

The primary mode of transmissi­on is through virus-filled lesions on the skin, which can be filled with infectious pus. It’s plausible that a person can be contagious without lesions on the skin, such as if a lesion is in their throat or mouth, and they can breathe out the virus to people.

Monkeypox is nowhere near as contagious as the coronaviru­s and measles, which can hang in stagnant air in a room for more than an hour.

What can be done if you’ve been exposed to monkeypox?

Ferrer said L.A. County health officials are arranging opportunit­ies for people exposed to the monkeypox virus to get vaccinated against the disease in hopes of avoiding infection.

Supplies of monkeypox vaccines are limited. County health officials are offering the Jynneos vaccine to reach people at higher risk.

What are authoritie­s doing to widen access to the vaccine?

The Biden administra­tion on Tuesday said federal officials are aiming to “expand vaccinatio­n for individual­s at risk and make testing more convenient for healthcare providers and patients across the country.”

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has already deployed more than 9,000 doses of vaccine; the administra­tion said Tuesday it will allocate “296,000 doses over the coming weeks, 56,000 of which will be allocated immediatel­y.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week began shipping tests to five commercial laboratory companies “to further increase monkeypox testing capacity and access,” the administra­tion said.

What does the monkeypox rash look like in the current outbreak?

A freelance video producer and editor, Matt Ford, wrote a story published on BuzzFeed outlining his exposure and infection with monkeypox, and included photos of the rash.

He said a friend tested positive for the monkeypox and contacted him on June 17 to let him know he might’ve been exposed through skin-to-skin contact.

“Sure enough, I checked myself for spots and noticed a couple of lesions in the underwear zone,” Ford wrote. “The next day, I began to have intense flulike symptoms: a fever, full-body chills, night sweats, a cough, a sore throat, and swollen lymph nodes. This would last about a week.”

Ford wrote that he went to the doctor on June 20, got tested and the results were sent to the L.A. County Department of Public Health. The lesions “in the underwear zone were becoming more intense and quite painful.”

Lesions spread to the face and elsewhere on his body, requiring him to get prescribed painkiller­s.

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