BREAKING NEWS: Monkeypox detected in Hungary

BREAKING NEWS: Monkeypox detected in Hungary. Credit Wikimedia

Tuesday May 31, the Chief Medical Officer of Hungary, announced that a 38-year-old man has been diagnosed with monkeypox

The man’s samples were delivered to the National Public Health Centre on Monday, according to the Daily News Hungary.

Authorities ran the necessary tests on Tuesday, and, Cecília Müller, a Hungarian physician and Chief Medical Officer, said: “The possible circumstances of the infection are being investigated”

According to the World Health Organisation, the disease originated from West and Central African countries.

It has, however, been reported in other countries of the world, including Europe and the United States.

If you get infected with monkeypox, it usually takes between 5 and 21 days for the first symptoms to appear.

The first symptoms of monkeypox include: a high temperature, headache, muscle aches, backache, swollen glands, shivering (chills) and exhaustion

A rash usually appears 1 to 5 days after the first symptoms. The rash often begins on the face, then spreads to other parts of the body. This can include the genitals.

The rash is sometimes confused with chickenpox. It starts as raised spots, which turn into small blisters filled with fluid. These blisters eventually form scabs which later fall off.

The symptoms usually clear up in a few weeks.

Monkeypox can be caught from infected rodents (such as rats, mice and squirrels) in parts of west and central Africa.

You can catch monkeypox from an infected animal if you’re bitten or you touch its blood, body fluids, spots, blisters or scabs.

It may also be possible to catch monkeypox by eating meat from an infected animal from central or west Africa that has not been cooked thoroughly, or by touching other products from infected animals (such as animal skin or fur).

Monkeypox can also spread from person to person through: touching clothing, bedding or towels used by someone with the monkeypox rash, touching monkeypox skin blisters or scabs (including during sex) and the coughs or sneezes of a person with the monkeypox rash.

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Written by

Anna Ellis

Originally from Derbyshire, Anna has lived in the middle of nowhere on the Costa Blanca for 19 years. She is passionate about her animal family including four dogs and four horses, musicals and cooking.

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