Los Angeles Times

Should schools worry about monkeypox?

Health officials say risk to kids remains low, including on L. A. County campuses.

- By Grace Toohey

With many Los Angeles County students returning to school this week and thousands of young people headed back to California universiti­es this month and next, there’s a rising concern about the potential for monkeypox outbreaks in academic and social environmen­ts.

But public health experts continue to assure parents and families that the risk for the rare illness remains low for most people, especially in clothed, mostly distanced settings, such as schools.

“I want to emphasize that the risk of monkeypox in the general population remains low,” said Dr. Rita Singhal, chief medical officer for the Los Angeles Department of Public Health. “Brief interactio­ns such as casual conversati­ons or walking by someone with monkeypox pose low risk.

“The risk of spread is minimal from attending an event with fully clothed people, traveling with others on a plane or public transit, swimming in a pool, hot tub or body of water or going to a public setting such as a grocery store, restaurant or to school,” she said.

There have, however, been at least two monkeypox cases confirmed in L. A. County children, the f irst of which was reported this month in Long Beach. Officials said that case was linked to another household member and that the child has since recovered.

Details about the other juvenile case, which Singhal announced Thursday, including the age of the child and the extent of the illness, were not immediatel­y released.

Though cases in children remain rare, monkeypox infections among adults in L. A. County continue to rise, increasing by 100 over the weekend to more than 900 confirmed or suspected cases Monday, according to data from the public health department.

The vast majority of cases have been in men ages 20 to 49 who identify as part of the LGBTQ community, according to county data. Those demographi­cs are consistent with the global outbreak of monkeypox, which is primarily infecting men who have sex with men as well as transgende­r and nonbinary people who have sex with men.

The illness, however, can spread to anyone regardless of gender or sexual identity through close, skin- to- skin contact. The virus also can be spread through bedding or towels that touched an infectious skin lesion or pox.

Unlike the coronaviru­s, monkeypox is not believed to be spread through the air, and it is rarely fatal. No one in the U. S. has died from the monkeypox virus, although some people have been hospitaliz­ed, including at least 15 people in L. A. County, health officials said.

“Monkeypox is a concern for public health, but we have to be clear that monkeypox is not COVID- 19; it’s not as easily transmissi­ble as COVID- 19,” said Dr. Smita Malhotra, medical director for the Los Angeles Unified School District.

She said district schools are following recommenda­tions from the county public health department on monkeypox, which includes taking precaution­s if someone might be sick or exposed and monitoring for possible symptoms.

“The biggest message that we’re sending to everyone is, if your child is sick, keep them home,” Malhotra said.

“Get them evaluated by their healthcare provider, and that is our best prevention against transmissi­on in schools.”

Barbara Ferrer, director of the county’s public health department, said parents should monitor any new rashes, but said “the risk of monkeypox in children is currently extremely low.”

“There are many common rashes in children,” she said. “However, parents should contact their child’s pediatrici­an or medical provider if any new unexplaine­d rash appears. The child [ should] be kept at home and their rash covered until the doctor is consulted.”

Ferrer said it’s important to continue practicing good hand hygiene and help children avoid touching any rashes they may have.

LAUSD Supt. Alberto Carvalho said the district is prepared with additional protective equipment, including masks and gloves, if necessary.

“We continue to stress the importance of washing hands and maintainin­g a social distance, [ and] we are not relaxing on the availabili­ty of hand disinfecta­nts,” Carvalho said. “Those are all protective measures that will continue to be in place at our schools.”

On college campuses including UCLA and USC, officials have sent out updated guidance and informatio­n on monkeypox as students prepare to return, alerting them about the risk of the virus, its symptoms and available resources.

Monkeypox vaccines remain in short supply and are available to a limited group of people whom public health officials have deemed most at- risk. UCLA said it is working with the county public health department to vaccinate eligible high- risk population­s and provide testing, and also is “developing isolation protocols for students who become infected with monkeypox.”

 ?? PARENTS SAY Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? goodbye as they watch their children enter Vena Avenue Elementary in Arleta on the f irst day of classes in the Los Angeles Unified School District. Though cases of monkeypox in kids remain rare, infections among adults in L. A. County continue to rise.
PARENTS SAY Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times goodbye as they watch their children enter Vena Avenue Elementary in Arleta on the f irst day of classes in the Los Angeles Unified School District. Though cases of monkeypox in kids remain rare, infections among adults in L. A. County continue to rise.

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