Monkeypox, a close relative of smallpox, has invaded
the United States for the first time. The CDC suspects that a Gambian rat from
Africa infected prairie dogs sold through exotic animal distributors to pet
stores and then kept as pets. The prairie dogs apparently have infected their
human owners and also pet rabbits. The media is pretending that monkeypox cannot
be spread between humans, which is not true. Monkeypox is definitely contagious
in humans, although experts suspect that person-to-person transmission would not
sustain monkeypox in humans without repeated reintroduction from infected
animals. The CDC recommends that any suspected or confirmed humans with
monkeypox be placed in isolation, preferably in a negative pressure environment
to prevent spread to others, and health care workers observe extreme precautions
including the use of gown, gloves, googles, and a certified filtering
respirator. The symptoms are the same as smallpox: fever, severe headache,
muscle aches, cough, rashes, lymph node enlargement, and scarring lesions on the
skin.
Monkeypox was discovered in 1970 and named that
because the virus resembled a pox virus found in captive monkeys in 1958.
Monkeypox exists in rainforest villages of central and western Africa, where it
is transferred through person-to-person contact. It causes the same symptoms as
smallpox, and differs from smallpox virus only in its nucleotide sequences. In
1996, 71 cases were reported in a region of the Democratic Republic of Congo
(formerly Zaire) with four deaths (5 percent of cases). In one small village of
346 inhabitants, 42 cases were reported, including three deaths (7 percent of
cases). Transmission commonly occurred through squirrels and Gambian rats.
As of today there are 30 confirmed cases in the
Midwest (Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, and Indiana), up from 19 cases reported
yesterday, 17 of which were in Milwaukee. The first case was discovered on May
16 in a three-year-old girl in Marshfield, Wisconsin. The girls family had
purchased two prairie dogs from a distributor in Villa Park, Illinois. The
exotic pet dealer also became ill.
The CDC is claiming that the smallpox vaccine
will prevent monkeypox, but this is questionable, and has never been proven. A
study conducted in the 1980s suggested that the smallpox (vaccinia) vaccine
might have a protective effect. This conclusion was based on the attack rate in
individuals with and without vaccination scars*. In a survey conducted in 1997
of people previously infected with monkeypox, over 15 percent had been
previously vaccinated against smallpox**. The appropriate strategy for
containment is isolation of cases and treatment with large doses of vitamin C
and the right homeopathic medicine and herbs, based on the presenting symptoms.
*Fine PE, Jezek Z, Grab B, Dixon H. The transmission potential of monkeypox virus in
human populations.Int J Epidemiol.
1988 Sep;17(3):643-50.
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consultation with your health care provider.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"