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Boston Herald
Boston Herald
National
Rick Sobey

Monkeypox cases in Massachusetts: State health officials confirm 2 more infections

BOSTON — Two more monkeypox cases have been confirmed in the Bay State, state health officials announced on Sunday.

Massachusetts last month reported the country’s first rare case of this year’s global monkeypox outbreak. There are now 49 confirmed monkeypox cases across the U.S., as the state Department of Public Health on Sunday confirmed two more local cases of monkeypox in two men who had close contact with one another.

Initial testing was completed late Saturday at the State Public Health Laboratory in Jamaica Plain. Confirmatory testing will be done at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Neither of the men reported a known link to the first case identified in Massachusetts last month.

The Boston Public Health Commission will lead the case investigations and work with DPH, the patients, and their health care providers to identify individuals who may have been in contact with the patients while they were infectious. The men are isolating to prevent spreading monkeypox to others.

“Although monkeypox infections remain rare, and none of the close contacts from Massachusetts’ first case developed monkeypox during their monitoring period, the CDC is reporting that cases continue to rise across the United States,” DPH State Epidemiologist Catherine Brown said in a statement.

“It is very important to be aware of the symptoms of monkeypox and to be vigilant,” Brown added. “Individuals with concerning rashes should contact their healthcare provider.”

There have been no deaths in the U.S. or globally related to this outbreak, and patients generally recover fully in two to four weeks. Although many of the early cases were associated with international travel, recent cases are not.

Gay and bisexual men and other men who have sex with men make up a large proportion of the cases identified to date. However, anyone who has been in close contact with someone who has monkeypox is at risk.

While the virus does not spread easily, people can spread the infection once they develop symptoms. Transmission occurs through direct contact with body fluids and monkeypox sores, by touching items that have been contaminated with fluids or sores (clothing, bedding, etc.), or less commonly through respiratory droplets following prolonged face-to-face contact.

Early symptoms of monkeypox can include fever, headache, sore throat, and swollen lymph nodes, but rash may be the first symptom. Rash lesions start flat, become raised, fill with clear fluid (vesicles), and then become pustules (filled with pus). A person with monkeypox can have many lesions or may have only a few.

As the CDC advises, if you believe you may have monkeypox, you should contact your health care provider. If you need to leave your home, wear a mask and cover your rash or lesions when around others.

Those who live with or care for someone who may have monkeypox should wear a mask and disposable gloves if they need to have any direct contact with lesions, and when handling any clothes or bedding if the person cannot do it themselves.

They should also wash their hands regularly, especially after contact with the person who is infected or with their clothes, bed sheets, towels and other items or surfaces they may have touched.

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