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interests / alt.law-enforcement / Re: 'Shocking' Biden & Democrat Monkeypox Screw-Up Means We Need to Admit We Now Face Two Pandemics

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o Re: 'Shocking' Biden & Democrat Monkeypox Screw-Up Means We Need to Admit We NowLock The FAGGOTS UP Like We Did The Japanese!

1
Re: 'Shocking' Biden & Democrat Monkeypox Screw-Up Means We Need to Admit We Now Face Two Pandemics

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https://novabbs.com/interests/article-flat.php?id=3059&group=alt.law-enforcement#3059

  copy link   Newsgroups: alt.law-enforcement alt.politics.obama alt.fan.rush-limbaugh talk.politics.guns alt.atheism
From: lock-up-...@glaad.org (Lock The FAGGOTS UP Like We Did The Japanese!)
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Date: Sat, 24 Sep 2022 10:50:25 +0200 (CEST)
Newsgroups: alt.law-enforcement,alt.politics.obama,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,talk.politics.guns,alt.atheism
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Subject: Re: 'Shocking' Biden & Democrat Monkeypox Screw-Up Means We Need to Admit We Now Face Two Pandemics
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 by: Lock The FAGGOTS UP - Sat, 24 Sep 2022 08:50 UTC

In article <t2svmb$3rhpb$26@news.freedyn.de>
<governor.swill@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> ...I spent all night sucking cocks.

We blew our chance to quickly contain monkeypox. Now the
dangerous virus is spreading fast all over the world.

Health experts agree: the outbreak could soon qualify as a
pandemic, if it doesn�t already. And the situation is likely to
get worse before it gets better. More infections, more deaths,
more chances for the pox to mutate.

�We are in uncharted territory with this outbreak� and still
early in the event,� James Lawler, an infectious disease expert
and a colleague of Wiley at the University of Nebraska Medical
Center, told The Daily Beast.

The latest figures from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control are
startling. The CDC tallied 9,647 infections as of July 11.
That�s a fourfold increase compared to just a month ago.

�It is shocking after all we learned with COVID-19, we have let
another virus escalate to this point. �
� Lawrence Gostin, Georgetown University
The virus, which causes a rash and fever and can be fatal in a
very small percentage of cases, is in 63 countries�57 of which
don�t usually have any monkeypox cases.

Cases are concentrated in West and Central Africa�where the
virus is endemic�as well as in Europe, where the current
outbreak began in May. But the U.S. is logging a startling
number of cases, as well: 865 in 39 states, according to the
CDC. That�s five times as many as a month ago.

�Monkeypox is clearly a global health emergency,� Lawrence
Gostin, a Georgetown University global-health expert, told The
Daily Beast. �It has simmered in small pockets in Central and
West Africa for decades, but until now there have been no cases
unrelated to travel in the rest of the world. Now it is in
virtually every region of the world and spreading rapidly.�

The death rate, mercifully, is still low. As of July 4, the most
recent date for which figures are available, the World Health
Organization had recorded just three deaths in the current
outbreak.

Three out of 9,647�or .03 percent�is a much lower death rate
than West and Central African countries apparently suffered in
their own pox outbreaks in recent decades. The worst African
outbreaks, involving a strain of the virus that�s endemic to the
Congo River Basin in Central Africa, have resulted in official
death rates as high as 10 percent.

But the more viruses spread, the more they mutate�often in ways
that make them deadlier. As long as monkeypox spreads faster
than health authorities can contain it, the greater the risk
it�s going to spawn new, more dangerous variants, potentially
driving up the death toll.

Monkeypox mostly spreads through close physical contact,
especially sexual contact. It�s not a sexually transmitted
disease, however. It just takes advantage of the skin-to-skin
contact that accompanies sex. The virus can also travel short
distances on spittle, although probably not far enough to
qualify as �airborne.�

Officials first noticed the current outbreak, involving a
relatively mild West African strain of the pox, after diagnosing
a U.K. traveler returning from Nigeria in early May. Hitching a
ride to Europe, the virus spread quickly through physical
contact.

David Heymann, who formerly headed the WHO�s emergencies
department, said that men attending raves in Spain and Belgium
�amplified� the outbreak�apparently through close, sometimes
sexual, contact with other men.

After that, the virus accompanied travelers on planes heading
for countries far and wide. Doctors diagnosed the first U.S.
case on May 27.

But it�s apparent now that the first diagnosed pox cases in
Europe and the U.S. weren�t the real first cases. On June 3, the
CDC announced it had found genetic evidence of U.S. pox cases
that predated the first cases in Europe from May.

Doctors may not have noticed or reported these earlier cases, at
first, owing to the similarity between pox symptoms and the
symptoms of some common sexually transmitted diseases such as
herpes. In other words, the current outbreak began, and
expanded, without anyone noticing at first.

The virus had a big head start, which helps to explain why,
months later, it still has the advantage. �By the time we
recognized that cases were happening, we were already behind,�
Lawler said.

Prompt diagnosis is the key to containing a dangerous virus
quickly. If officials know where the virus is concentrated in
the early days of an outbreak, they can isolate infected people,
conduct contact-tracing to identify vulnerable populations and
deploy therapies and vaccines and to treat the infected and
protect the uninfected. (Lucky for us, widely available smallpox
vaccines work just fine against monkeypox.)

With its likeliest infection vectors cut off by early
intervention, the virus withers and disappears�before it can
mutate into some new variant that might, say, be more contagious
or even evade vaccines.

That�s what should have happened back in April or even earlier,
but didn�t because the WHO, CDC and other health organizations
didn�t even know a pox outbreak was happening. The current,
rapid spread is the consequence of that initial failure.

The worst outcome isn�t hard to imagine�10,000 cases could
quickly bloom into 100,000 cases. Then 1 million. Various
experts and agencies disagree over the precise definition of
�pandemic,� but if the pox outbreak doesn�t already qualify,
it�s increasingly likely that it will in the weeks to come. At
that point, the world will be contending with simultaneous
pandemics.

The WHO for one has studiously avoided using the p-word to
describe the pox outbreak. The CDC did not immediately respond
to a query

This is a mistake, Lawler said. �We certainly cannot make
�pandemic� declarations about every disease outbreak that
crosses multiple international borders without becoming the boy
who cries wolf,� he conceded.

But, he added, �I would argue that we should have learned some
humility in the face of emerging viruses by now.� If the word
�pandemic� gets people�s attention and underscores the growing
risk�use it.

The silver lining is the very low death rate in the current pox
outbreak. That could be a statistical anomaly resulting from a
huge overcount of deaths in earlier African outbreaks. �I am not
sure we have a full grasp of the denominator of cases that
actually occur in West Africa,� Lawler pointed out. Meaning,
it�s possible that pox deaths in Africa were spread out across a
much bigger number of infections than we realized at the time.

It�s also possible we�re seeing a happy side-effect of a pox
outbreak mostly affecting richer communities. �Monkeypox is now
being diagnosed in urban populations where more people have
access to health-care facilities,� Blossom Damania, a virologist
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, told The
Daily Beast.

Either way, we shouldn�t get complacent. The pox, like all
viruses, treats every infected person like a laboratory. A
chance to try new things, learn and change. Every additional
infection increases the likelihood of new variants emerging. As
COVID has repeatedly demonstrated, new variants mean new risks.
Greater transmissibility, severity or vaccine-evasion�or a mix
of all three.

There�s still time to prevent the worst-case scenario of
millions of cases and potentially thousands of deaths. The WHO,
CDC and other health bodies must double down on efforts to
educate doctors and speed up diagnoses�and then move more
quickly to isolate and treat infected people and vaccinate those
around them. �If we can get enough vaccine into high-risk
contacts, this will cease,� Amesh Adalja, a public-health expert
at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, told The Daily
Beast.

COVID reminded us how bad a viral outbreak can get. Then
monkeypox came around to remind us of our strong tendency toward
complacency, even amid an ongoing health crisis. �It is shocking
that, after all we have learned with COVID-19, we have let
another virus escalate to the point of becoming a global health
emergency,� Gostin said.

To catch up with the fast-moving pox, what we need now�more than
anything�is a fresh sense of urgency.

https://www.thedailybeast.com/shocking-monkeypox-screw-up-means-
we-need-to-admit-we-now-face-two-pandemics

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