Health officials issue alert after monkeypox outbreak in this state

In a recent development that has caught the attention of South Australians, health officials have issued a critical update regarding the emergence of three cases of mpox, formerly known as monkeypox, in the state.

This marks the first time the virus has been detected locally since 2022, raising public health and safety concerns.



The three individuals diagnosed with mpox include men in their 20s, 30s, and 50s.

Despite the understandable concern this news may bring, health authorities are reassuring the public that the risk of widespread transmission remains low.


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South Australia issued an alert after three cases of monkeypox were found in the area. Credit: Shutterstock


Mpox typically requires prolonged, close, or intimate contact for transmission, which means casual contact is less likely to result in the spread of the virus.

In 2022, South Australia had no reported cases of mpox, and only two cases were recorded during the global outbreak.

However, the situation has evolved in 2024, with the country witnessing 67 cases, 45 of which were reported in Victoria.

The renaming of monkeypox to mpox was a step to address concerns about stigmatisation and racism associated with the original name.



Mpox is a viral infection characterised by a distinctive rash and symptoms such as fever, chills, exhaustion, headache, muscle aches, backache, and swollen lymph nodes.

These symptoms can manifest up to 21 days after exposure, and the virus can be transmitted through skin-to-skin contact, contaminated items, or respiratory droplets.

An mpox vaccination is available and is being offered for free to eligible groups, including all sexually active gay, bisexual men, or men who have sex with men.

Dr Louise Flood, Deputy Director of the Communicable Disease Control Branch, urged those who are eligible to take advantage of the vaccine to protect themselves and others.

‘The Risk to the public is low. Mpox is not easily transmitted from person to person without prolonged close or intimate contact,’ she said.

‘If you do think you have mpox, seek medical advice and get tested.’



Mpox is a zoonosis, a disease that can be transmitted from animals to humans.

While it is typically associated with tropical rainforest areas of Central and West Africa, there is currently no evidence of animal-to-human transmission in Australia.

The disease is mainly spread through direct contact with infected body fluids, lesions, or respiratory droplets.

During the 2022 outbreak, a significant number of cases affected men who were sexually active with other men.

While most cases of mpox are mild and can be managed with over-the-counter treatments like paracetamol and hydration, individuals who are immunocompromised may be at greater risk of serious complications.
Key Takeaways
  • South Australia has reported three locally acquired cases of mpox (formerly known as monkeypox), marking the first occurrences in the state since 2022.
  • Health officials have emphasised that the risk to the general public is low, as mpox transmission usually requires prolonged, close or intimate contact.
  • An mpox vaccination is available, and free vaccines are being offered to eligible individuals, including all sexually active gay, bisexual, or men who have sex with men.
  • Mpox is a zoonotic virus typically spread to humans from animals, but there is currently no evidence of animal-to-human transmission in Australia; the disease can also be spread through direct contact with infected body fluids, lesions, or respiratory droplets.
Have you or someone you know been affected by the mpox outbreak? What measures are you taking to stay safe? Let us know in the comments below.
 

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Great response Beau.
Providing the CDC with information could end up helping a lot more people than the numbers in this forum. I hope you do go through with it. If so, good job on the social responsibility side of things.

I'm not in any risk category group now, but have been a happy purchaser of online clothing for my wife bit over 12 moths ago when Temu was better to buy from. I haven't done any purchases since then. The speed of delivery opens up a whole new can of worms following your information.
Cheers and all the best.
All done Jimmy, I have sent all of the detailed information I have available to the CDC, as well as recommending that a public awareness campaign be initiated about imported fabric and clothing being thoroughly washed in disinfectant laundry liquid and sun-dried before use. Now I just have to wait for the response and see what happens I guess.
Cheers again,
Beau
 
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IMPORTANT: Much of the information in this article is not quite correct. I say that because as I type this, I am sitting at my computer trying my best to resist the need to scratch the itching that covers much of my body, because I know if I do, not only will it cause them to itch more, it will also break the surface causing it to seep fluid, spread more, and turn into infected lesions. Yes, I have MPox, and it's very bad. My lower right leg was the first place it appeared as an itchy rash that I just had to scratch. It soon spread around my entire calf just above the ankle that became infected, with lesions likely to leave permanent scars. It is now around 4 or 5 weeks later and that part of my body is in the final stages of healing, however, it is still spreading and forming rashes and itchy spots on other parts of my body. So, to say it "lasts around 4 weeks" is misleading as each new rash outbreak on the same person takes about 3 to 4 weeks to heal, but you can potentially be dealing with it for months. I am into to the second month.

HOW DID I GET IT: This is the very important bit. For all intents and purposes, I am a hermit. I am 69 years old and live alone in a unit in Lismore. My wife calls or visits every day and is the only human I am in regular contact with. The only contact is a quick hug or kiss on the cheek/forehead. We stopped being 'intimate' many years ago, but remain devoted, loving companions. I have never been gay', 'bisexual', or anything else with other men at all. So, the question remains, I am the least likely person to ever get MPox, yet I am struggling through it as we speak ... and I caught it from buying imported goods from China, which I do as part of my hobbies making dioramas and 'Print-On-Demand' clothing products. I literally have 2 or 3 little packages of imitation trees, shrubs, people, buildings, etc every week that I mainly buy through TEMU. But my MPox came through a different source, a company called YOYCOL, that exports out of Guangzhou in the Guangdong Province in China (as does TEMU and WISH, etc). I designed and imported a pair of soft, fleecy, baggy pants through them that are very comfy and look stunning. They have elastic hems around the lower calf, just above the ankle, where my infection first began. I wore my nice new pants regularly in the cool evenings, all the time rubbing against my calf causing itching, that I kept scratching, not realising what was happening underneath.

So that's my whole story, and is the thing the news is NOT telling you. The other major cause of the MPOX spread around the world is from contact with imported goods from many overseas countries. China is just one of a few countries, and the huge ports of Guangdong Province where most of the products ship out from are now screening all IMPORTED goods for the MPox virus ... but not EXPORTS to other countries as there are simply too many exports every day for that to even be feasible, yet the region and ports are rife with MPox. So, if you are buying products from China, especially clothing, fabric, pillows, blankets, bedding, etc. Ensure that you WASH and DISINFECT them before use, then dry them in the sun, because you DON'T want to be dealing with MPox, and neither do your families. Please spread the word on the danger of imported goods and MPox because the news agencies don't seem to be.

Cheers,
Beau
Thank you for the information. It doesn't surprise me that cloth materials can import monkeypox. It is a cousin of smallpox and the provision of smallpox-raddled clothing and blankets proved to be a useful way of knocking off local indigenes when we wanted their lands.

Australian Customs and immigration and Quarantine Department, get your act together and fumigate etc that sort of import. You happily destroyed about 8-10 years of my overseas unpublished scientific work because that box also had one piece of very dead good quality Tasmanian craftwood in it with one empty 1mm-diametre Tasmanian wormhole in it.
 
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Thanks Jimmy. This has been very challenging for me because 30 years ago I was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma (rare form of Burkitt's) and was made a bit of a 'guinea pig' for a new treatment involving the harvesting and cloning of stem cells, etc. I was a 'bubble-man' spending 6 weeks in total isolation while my entire bone marrow/immune system was destroyed and regrown from scratch. As such, I have informed and provided photographs to different authorities anonymously because I didn't want to set myself up for more in-depth investigations and experiments again, not to mention the possible media attention. So, I've been struggling a lot with balancing my sense of 'social responsibility' with 'do I really want all that again' type fears and concerns. However, the information and link you have provided is greatly appreciated indeed, and now that it's there, I might have to just go with it I think.

No on the vaccination. I would have read all the info in the news about it being spread through 'intimate contact' and 'mainly male to male contact', etc, and said to myself "Oh, well I certainly have nothing to worry about then." and ignored it. Now, with what I know, I can only strongly recommend that if you are in either one of the risk categories mentioned, OR buy frequent imports of clothing, linen, and/or other bedding/fabrics and products from overseas, GET VACCINATED because this b*tch plays hard and is not nice at all to live with. Cheers and huge thanks again.
That would suggest that we take pre-emptive care when buying second-hand clothing from op-shops, and that op-shop workers should be advised about the potential risk of handling second hand clothes. Of course, government is far too polite to demand/impose an Australia-wide vaccination programme for all; look what happened last time; idiots rioting on the streets. And besides, vaccines and healthcare cost money and we want low income taxes and a budget surplus ............
 
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All done Jimmy, I have sent all of the detailed information I have available to the CDC, as well as recommending that a public awareness campaign be initiated about imported fabric and clothing being thoroughly washed in disinfectant laundry liquid and sun-dried before use. Now I just have to wait for the response and see what happens I guess.
Cheers again,
Beau

I hope we all get lucky with the bod who opens your email Beau, that he/she has an ounce of intelligence and escalates it.

M_eight, who would have thought there is a guardian angel for all of Australia living like a hermit in Lismore.

Looks like a good place for good people to live. Cheers.
 
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