• Re: UW Medicine virologists track local queer spread of monkeypox as mo

    From Why Waste Money On Queers?@21:1/5 to disgusting faggots on Tue Aug 9 03:43:35 2022
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.politics.nationalism.black
    XPost: alt.hollywood

    In article <t2f2p8$3ivp5$259@news.freedyn.de>
    disgusting faggots <swalwell@mail.house.gov> wrote:


    Very happy to see Swallwell fail after his immature ignorant behavior with a Chink whore spy.

    As new monkeypox infections continue to pop up in Washington,
    some state virologists are beginning to turn their attention
    toward tracking the virus's spread.

    UW Medicine's virology lab, the largest genomic sequencing lab
    in the state, has become one of the few in the country to
    establish testing for monkeypox, according to a Monday
    statement. The step comes as the state's number of monkeypox
    infections ticks up — totaling at least 16 cases as of last
    week, including the first infection in a Snohomish County
    resident.

    Over the weekend, Pierce County health officials also reported
    the county's first probable monkeypox case in a man in his 30s.
    He was not hospitalized and is recovering at home, according to
    a statement from the Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department.

    "Our [lab's] turnaround time is one to two days right now," said
    Alex Greninger, an assistant professor of laboratory medicine at
    UW Medicine who helps run the virology lab. "This is something
    we do all the time, for lots and lots and lots of DNA viruses."

    The lab has been sequencing COVID-19 cases since the start of
    the pandemic and will continue to track the coronavirus locally,
    in addition to collecting data on monkeypox spread.

    Health care providers can order testing through UW Medicine's
    Department of Laboratory Medicine if they think a patient has
    been infected with monkeypox.

    The state also expects to receive about 400 courses of the two-
    dose monkeypox vaccine through the federal government's plan to
    distribute a limited amount of vaccines nationwide, the state
    Department of Health said last week.

    About 272 courses have already been distributed in parts of
    Washington with known cases and close contacts, the department
    added.

    While early cases occurred in people who had traveled outside
    Washington, more recent cases have occurred in people who hadn't
    traveled recently, meaning they were likely exposed to monkeypox
    locally, King County public health officials said last week.
    Officials are working to conduct contact tracing and notify
    close contacts in these cases, according to the DOH.

    Monkeypox can affect anyone, and those who are most at risk are
    those who have had close skin-to-skin contact with someone with
    monkeypox. In the recent surge, cases have been reported to be
    especially prevalent among men who have had close or intimate
    contact with other men, local health leaders have said, though
    the risk is not limited to men who have sex with men.

    The vaccine can reduce the chance of developing an infection for
    those who have recently had close contact with someone who has
    tested positive.

    According to the DOH, monkeypox can cause flulike symptoms,
    swollen lymph nodes and a rash that can appear anywhere on the
    body. Most recently, people had lesions on the genitals or in
    the anal area sometimes with or without flulike symptoms, the
    health authority said.

    Anyone who has symptoms of monkeypox or has been in close
    contact with someone who has been diagnosed should see a health
    care provider.

    Most cases do not require hospitalization and to date, no one in
    the U.S. has died from the virus. People typically recover
    within two to four weeks but more serious cases can arise for
    immunocompromised people, children, people with eczema or who
    are pregnant or breastfeeding.

    Information from The Seattle Times archives was included in this
    article.

    https://www.yakimaherald.com/news/northwest/uw-medicine- virologists-track-local-spread-of-monkeypox-as-more-wa-counties- see-infections/article_93a1a5cf-6dba-5354-b53c-4b5e0ca829e3.html

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