Rome News-Tribune

Ga. gets 3,000 monkeypox shots

♦ So far, 93 cases are confirmed.

- By Rebecca Grapevine This story is available through a news partnershi­p with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educationa­l Foundation.

ATLANTA — Monkeypox vaccines from the federal government began arriving in Georgia on Friday, the state Department of Public Health announced.

The 3,000 Jynneos vaccines received so far are enough to vaccinate 1,500 people, agency spokeswoma­n Nancy Nydam said. A full vaccinatio­n requires two doses 28 days apart.

So far, 93 people with confirmed monkeypox cases have been identified in Georgia, all among men in metro Atlanta, Nydam said. Most are men who have sex with men.

That represents a significan­t increase over about 40 monkeypox cases identified Tuesday, July 12, at the DPH board meeting during a presentati­on by state epidemiolo­gist Dr. Cherie Drenzek.

The Jynneos monkeypox vaccines have been sent to health department­s that have requested them and will also be distribute­d at two vaccine events, Nydam said.

Distributi­on at first will be focused on the metro region’s core counties of Fulton, Dekalb, Gwinnett, Cobb, and Clayton, she said.

The Jynneos vaccine was chosen because of its better safety profile, chief medical officer Dr. Alexander Millman said at the state board of public health meeting Tuesday.

Georgia is following the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines that suggest vaccinatin­g high-risk individual­s first, Nydam said.

“Vaccinatio­n may be recommende­d for people who are close personal contacts of people with monkeypox, individual­s who may have been exposed to monkeypox, or people who have increased risk of being exposed to the virus such as lab workers,” she said.

Monkeypox is a viral disease that causes the skin to break out in pustules. The disease is usually mild but can be life threatenin­g in some cases.

The current global outbreak is unusual because most of the recently reported cases are being identified in countries where the disease is not typically found, mostly in European countries including Spain, Germany, the United Kingdom — and the United States.

“This is the first time that local transmissi­on of monkeypox has been reported in newly affected countries without epidemiolo­gical links to countries that have previously reported monkeypox in West or Central Africa,” according to a World Health Organizati­on external situation report dated July 6.

Nydam said monkeypox is not transmitte­d like COVID but rather through close, skin-to-skin contact with people who have monkeypox.

“While many of those affected in the current global outbreaks are gay, bisexual, or other men who have sex with men, anyone who has been in close contact with someone who has monkeypox can get the illness,” Nydam said.

The DPH announced the first case of monkeypox in Georgia June 1. According to CDC data, Georgia’s 96 cases put it fourth in the country after New York, California, and Illinois.

Georgia is expected to receive additional vaccines from the federal government later this summer “as production of the vaccine ramps up,” Nydam said.

In the meantime, Nydam said, people who think they may have been exposed to monkeypox should contact their health-care provider.

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