UN Monkeypox Article Megathread

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Four more people have been diagnosed with monkeypox in the UK, bringing the total number of cases in the latest outbreak to seven.

All four new patients are gay or bisexual men who were infected in London and had no travel links to Africa, health chiefs have confirmed after MailOnline broke the news earlier today.

Two are known to each other but have no connection to any of the previous cases, in a sign the virus is spreading in the community for the first time.

Nurses and doctors are being advised to stay 'alert' to patients who present with a new rash.

Monkeypox is often mistaken for more common rash illnesses like chickenpox, measles, scabies and syphilis, which makes it difficult to diagnose early.

Dr Susan Hopkins, chief medical adviser at the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), said: 'This is rare and unusual.

'UKHSA is rapidly investigating the source of these infections because the evidence suggests that there may be transmission of the monkeypox virus in the community, spread by close contact.

'We are particularly urging men who are gay and bisexual to be aware of any unusual rashes or lesions and to contact a sexual health service without delay.'

All seven UK cases have tested positive for the West African strain of the virus, which is believed to be milder than other versions.
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Six of the seven cases were diagnosed in London while one is being treated at a specialist unit in Newcastle
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Monkeypox is a rare viral infection which causes unusual rashes or lesions (shown in a handout provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the US

Exactly how the new patients acquired the infection 'remains under urgent investigation', the UKHSA said.

The rare viral infection which kills up to one in ten of those infected but does not spread easily between people. It is transmitted via respiratory droplets during prolonged face-to-face contact or bodily fluids.

MailOnline has learned that at least one sexual health clinic in West London had started implementing tougher infection control measures this morning, including a one-metre social distancing rule in waiting rooms.

A source told MailOnline that some health teams were breaking ranks from national guidance and 'perhaps putting in measures locally'.

The UKHSA announced on May 7 that a person who had recently travelled to Nigeria had contracted the infection.

It was believed they contracted the illness in Nigeria, where monkeypox is endemic, before travelling to the UK.

Two more cases were announced on Saturday, in two individuals who lived in the same household but were not linked to the initial case.
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Nurses and doctors are being advised to stay 'alert' to patients who present with a new rash or scabby lesions (like above)
The rare tropical disease, which causes flu-like symptoms and blisters on the skin, is caused by a virus spread by monkeys, rats, squirrels and other small mammals.

A World Health Organization report last year suggested the natural R rate of the virus – the number of people each patient would infect if they lived normally while sick – is two.

But the real rate is likely much lower because 'distinctive symptoms greatly aid in its early detection and containment,' the team said, meaning it's easy to spot cases and isolate them.

Up to 10 per cent of people who become ill with monkeypox will die and most deaths from the virus occur in younger age groups, according to the WHO.

The first case of monkeypox in a human was recorded in 1970 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and has since been detected in a number of central and wester African countries.

Most cases are reported in the DRC and Nigeria.

In 2003, the disease was detected in the US when an outbreak occurred following the importation of rodents from Africa.

The first cases were detected in the UK in 2018, when three people contracted the virus after a man travelled back from Nigeria including an NHS nurse who had been caring for a patient and blamed her PPE.

The incident meant more than 50 people were warned they had been exposed to the potentially deadly virus however no other cases were recorded from that outbreak.

A further case was detected in London in December 2019 and another two cases were detected in North Wales in 2021. All cases were thought to have been caught by travellers who had been to Nigeria.

A WHO report in 2020 explained that human-to-human transmission of the virus is rare and that the longest chain of cases appears to only have been six people before it ended.

The report said: 'The epidemic risk for humans is considered to be small.'
 
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Newsflash: reagan sends a plague from the grave to destroy all gays
Behold: aids 2.0


Behold. And seethe:

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Such a weasely argument. No virus is exclusive to gay hosts, but the methods of transmission and incidents of infection are overwhelmingly correlated with the homosexual community. It's like saying that blowing off a finger in a fireworks accident isn't "exclusive" to drunk rednecks - technically that's true, explosions don't care about the personal lives of the fingers they blow off, but the fact remains that you're not seeing many Harvard med students moaning in the back of a pickup truck, holding their bloody stumps.

AIDS is a gay disease, and so far, monkeypox is too. Lying to the public because you're worried that normies might use this as an excuse to look disfavorably upon your weird authoritarian sex cult, will not make it any less true.
 
Almost every single pharmaceutical we have ever made has it’s origins in plant/fungal/bacterial matter. It’s only the last few years we’ve started designing drugs in silico and even then most of the start points in the libraries are naturally derived. ‘Smashed up plants’ are drugs, and they sometimes work extremely well. Sometimes sythentic drugs do and sometimes they don’t.
I work partially in drug design and testing and ‘proven treatment’ with pharmaceuticals… well covid vaccines should show you that doesn’t always go so well. Ditto Vioxx. Paxlovid (disaster waiting to happen…) I’ve seen some definitions of approved safety and efficacy/equivalence that are shady as.
Let me put it this way; a decade or so of being involved in clinical trials has made me vastly more skeptical of synthetic drugs and vastly more intrusive by and appreciative of the pharmacopoeia of the natural world.

Regardless, you would have to agree with me that the study provided is crap based on the previous points I made, irrespective of the sentence you disagree with me on. I still stand on the point, that a safe, effective, proven non-toxic medication that is a single chemical entity that meets the standards of purity and potency established by the FDA is without any doubt superior to a non-standardized raw tincture of a plant where the active ingredient is unknown and there have been no toxicological, mutagenic, or teratogenic experiments done, other than to show that with a bunch of cells in a dish that the effective and toxic doses are only separated by a factor of 5, which is disturbingly low.
 
Regardless, you would have to agree with me that the study provided is crap based on the previous points I made, irrespective of the sentence you disagree with me on.
The study is what it is - very small, pretty much observational. It doesn’t make it crap, not all papers published are the definitive meta analysis of double blind randomised blah blah. An awful lot are just ‘yeah this is what we saw’. As a datapoint, that should be taken into account. It’s insufficient on its own, but such things are often the start point for people rummaging through libraries of compounds.
A huge amount of drug development starts with historical accounts, folk remedies and small observational papers. Up until last year, you then had to do a colossal amount of work from preclinical to trials and beyond to get a drug to market.
(Now you just do a spot of regulatory capture and scare the shit out of the public..)
It’ll be interesting to see how all this pans out. Hopefully nobody starts suggesting mass vaccination with current small/monkey pox vaccines. That would be a very bad idea.
 
The study is what it is - very small, pretty much observational. It doesn’t make it crap, not all papers published are the definitive meta analysis of double blind randomised blah blah. An awful lot are just ‘yeah this is what we saw’. As a datapoint, that should be taken into account. It’s insufficient on its own, but such things are often the start point for people rummaging through libraries of compounds.
A huge amount of drug development starts with historical accounts, folk remedies and small observational papers. Up until last year, you then had to do a colossal amount of work from preclinical to trials and beyond to get a drug to market.
(Now you just do a spot of regulatory capture and scare the shit out of the public..)
It’ll be interesting to see how all this pans out. Hopefully nobody starts suggesting mass vaccination with current small/monkey pox vaccines. That would be a very bad idea.

It is interesting from a development perspective, but only from that perspective. People are going to be using that paper as the basis for the purchase of this material online, as the quoted OP mentioned, stocks of this tincture are suddenly being sold out. Using this paper as a decision point to consume this stuff in the event the monkeypox starts to spread in the US is an incredibly bad idea. We could see mass poisoning, or it could be setting people up for gastric cancer in 20 years time and we suddenly see a huge spike in the future. It's way too dangerous for people to use to make any decisions, but is appears that people are doing just that, that was my point.
 
Do nothing. A disease that affects primarily faggots is a blessing in disguise.
The virus enters the body through broken skin (even if not visible), respiratory tract, or mucous membranes (eyes, nose, or mouth). Human-to-human transmission is thought to occur primarily through large respiratory droplets. Respiratory droplets generally cannot travel more than a few feet. Animal-to-human transmission may occur by bite or scratch, bush meat preparation, direct contact with body fluids or lesion material, or indirect contact with lesion material, such as through contaminated bedding.

Are We There Yet? The Smallpox Research Agenda Using Variola Virus​

FDA approves the first smallpox treatment​


Cool. It appears that Tom Clancy was either a massive glowing spook, had spook friends or is a nom-de-plume for spook whistleblowers.
 
Just watched an X-files episode where a prison got these giant lesions that spat up parasites on everyone. See, the lesson I gained from that is to stay away from people who have giant pulsating pustules.
 
Thing is, it won't really matter if "monkeypox" is bad or mild, what will matter is if TPTB are gonna go, "Okay everyone, here are new mandates. No one can do anything because we said so. Um. Because illness. Don't question us, BE AFRAID!"

Also this seems way too openly planned to be a thing. Is it a distraction? Are we being kept busy while they get the actors into their alien suits and set up spaceships?
 
But to be fair people were dying
It wasn't the death rate that made AIDS so terrifying. It was the fact people were literally withering away, completely dying at a cellular level from inside out. Early AIDS pandemic not knowing how to treat people was some crazy shit like insane radiation sickness tier. People were rotting away basically turning into zombies/ghouls. We had no idea how the fuck to slow shit down. AIDS was like nothing we ever seen before the medical/scientific community was very very afraid . PLUS the fear of WHAT IF it became airborn, for real people should jump down the rabbit hole and read into hiv&aids pandemic/treatment/the effect it was having in the 80's early 90's. Shit was balls to the walls insane.
 
I don't know how they plan to spin that. If they go into the "lock everything down!!!!" rhetoric, it will look like homophobia and flip the left to anti-lockdown positions*. Maybe that's what's intended? The lockdowns are bad for the boomer line, you know.
There probably will be push for mandatory vaccination with some shitty mRNA vax, since the traditional cowpox-based smallpox vaccine, which also prevents monkeypox, is orders of magnitude too dangerous by modern sensibilities. Especially for a disease with 1% mortality which unlike smallpox cannot be eradicated due to animal reservoir.
Another possibility is that the spread will simply stop by itself before the bureaucrats do anything - the virus seems to require uhmm.. considerable effort to infect another human and the disease doesn't last long, so unless some infected homos are doing the Dugas stunt just now, it will die off.

*When they tried closing the gay baths in SF in the 1980s, the activists immediately invoked Godwin's Law:
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Any articles yet about how it is straight white males oppression of the gays that is responsible for monkey pox affecting them yet?

"The hetero-normative, white supremacist straight communities homophobia that discourages them from engaging in gay sex further marginalises the homosexual community and disproportionately makes the gay community the victims of gay diseases."
 
As far as I know it's strictly sexually transmitted and contained to bisexuals and gays. So to beat this all the gays have to do is not have sex for two weeks.

Think they can manage that?
Nick Fuentes is on high alert!
1. Covid was predicted to infect billions by now, that didn't happen
2. Monkeypox isn't airborne and is only currently spreading in the west among faggots
Fauci can turn that kind of shit into a decade long fear campaign.
If Bill Gates is killing off the faggots with a modified monkeypox, I won't just re-install windows, I'll fucking pay for it this time.
Windows 11 downloads monkey pox into your brain just like Snow Crash!!! - Brianna Wu
 
San Diego men came down with a smallpox-related virus after sex with someone who received a government-sponsored vaccine. Creative Commons

The smallpox vaccine can spread virus through sexual contact - watch out!
A man in San Diego who was recently received a smallpox vaccine passed a milder form of the vaccinia disease virus to someone he had sex with - and that man passed it on to someone else through sexual contact.
The surprising news was revealed today in the weekly Morbidity and Mortality Report (MMWR) from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The 24-year-old man in San Diego who sexually contracted the vaccinia virus received it from another man who was given a smallpox vaccine as part of a Department of Defense vaccination program. The vaccination program began in 2002 in response to the bioterrorism threat, and was required for all military personnel and civilian employees.
CDC researchers said this is the first report of tertiary sexual transmission of the vaccinia virus from the smallpox vaccine - that is, transmission from a vaccinated person to an unvaccinated one, who then transmits it to a third person.
The United States eradicated smallpox in the general population in 1972 after an aggressive vaccination campaign, and the national smallpox vaccine program was discontinued after the worldwide eradication of smallpox.

Smallpox vaccines contain a weakened form of the live vaccinia virus, which is similar to smallpox but cannot cause smallpox itself. However, the live vaccinia virus can cause symptoms in people who have it, and can be contagious.

"The smallpox vaccine is a live-virus vaccine, and it's not news that it can infect people, but it cannot convert to smallpox," Dr. Marc Siegel, a clinical associate professor of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center, told Medical Xpress. "It's a different virus; it's a kissing cousin of smallpox. It can be transmitted if you are not careful."

Vaccinia is related to the cowpox virus, which was used to create the first smallpox vaccine.

The vaccinia virus is not necessarily sexually transmitted. It can spread by skin-to-skin contact, when someone touches the smallpox vaccination site on another person or comes into contact with clothing contaminated by the virus.

Vaccinia symptoms are much milder than smallpox, generally consisting of rash, fever, and head and body aches.

The case was diagnosed when the 24-year-old man with secondary vaccinia virus transmission sought treatment at a private hospital in San Diego County for a rash in June 2012. The patient had lesions on his anus and lips, and developed fever, fatigue, and nausea.

The doctors diagnosed him with the vaccinia virus after realizing he had sex a week earlier with a man who received a smallpox vaccine, who had not kept his vaccination site adequately covered. The infected man had also had sex with a third man two days before he sought treatment. The third man sought treatment a week later after developing lesions on his forearm, penis, and scrotum, and experiencing malaise, sore throat, and nasal congestion.

Both infected men were then given a treatment of vaccinia antibodies to fight the infection, and recovered in several weeks with no complications. The CDC reported that neither patient had any sexual contact with others in the weeks after their treatment, so there was no additional transmission of the smallpox vaccine virus.

On the plus side, the two men's exposure to vaccinia means they are now immune to smallpox.

According a 2011 review, 115 cases of vaccinia virus transmission have been reported from vaccinated to unvaccinated people since 2002. Vaccinia is typically transmitted from smallpox vaccine recipients through sexual contact, though there have been reports of transmission at gyms, or from mother to child.

The CDC report stresses prevention recommendations for people who receive the smallpox vaccine.

Covering the smallpox vaccine injection site is most important in order to avoid spreading vaccinia to others, and people who are vaccinated should remember that they can spread the vaccinia virus through sexual contact.

Just saying that many STD's have evolved to a more virulent strain including HIV. Scientists state that Monkeypox is DNA based vs RNA meaning it has less chance of significant mutation as the DNA can obviously make repairs with an original copy. However, in a petri dish such as packed area of people, a disaster, lack of sanitation or vector such as

A FUCKING BATHHOUSE WITH STUPID MEN SWAPPING BODILY FLUIDS WITH DOZENS OF OTHER STUPID MEN

microbes have more of a chance for a significant mutation.

Here we go.

racist.jpg
 
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(Quote options fucked again)

Hmmm, i did not think I could feel more tin foil hat inclined.

Would be brilliant that they chose homo's to be spreaders , the groups less likely to "trust the science" and comply last time where the exact same groups to be disgusted by fags and allready more than willing to chuck them of roofs. They might be a lot more malleable to restrictions this time.
 
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