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Monkeypox | Here’s what you should know

WITH the first case of monkeypox recently confirmed in the Philippines, there are many questions and few answers. How do you get it? What do you know if someone in your household gets it?

Our team at Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) put together this simple FAQ to help you understand monkeypox, and how you can protect yourself.

How do you get it?

There are two ways you can get monkeypox: through contact with infected humans, or through contact with infected animals.

If someone has monkeypox, you can get infected through:

Contact with infected animals is especially risky in places like Central or West Africa. You can get infected through:

What are the symptoms?

Even before the rash appears, you might recognize some of these early symptoms:

When you do get a rash, it may appear on the body, including face, palms or soles, chest, genitals or anus. You may also get lesions in the mouth.

What can you do if you get infected with monkeypox?

How can you protect yourself from monkeypox?

If someone around you has monkeypox, there are some steps you can take to protect yourself.

 

Is monkeypox deadly?

The mortality rate for monkeypox is 1 to 10 per cent.

What is more worrying for some people is the possibility of scarring. The blisters caused by monkeypox are relatively large, and therefore could cause more damage to the patient’s skin than chickenpox or Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease.

Is there a vaccine?

Many people have been talking about using the smallpox vaccine against monkeypox. Historical data shows that the smallpox vaccine has a maximum protection of 85% against monkeypox.

However, since the eradication of smallpox in the 1980s, smallpox vaccine administration has been stopped worldwide. Even if individuals have had previous vaccinations, there is a chance that the protection of the vaccines declines over time.

Monkeypox, Smallpox & Chickenpox: How can you tell the difference?

  Monkeypox Smallpox (eradicated) Chickenpox
Ways of transmission Animal-to-human and human to human transmission Human-to-human transmission Human-to-human transmission
Mode of transmission

 

Direct contact with the rash

Bodily fluids (especially the discharges from vesicles)

Respiratory droplets

Bodily fluids (especially the discharges from vesicles)

Respiratory droplets

 

 

Bodily fluids

Respiratory droplets

Incubation period 5-21 days (7 days in average) 7-17 days

 

10-21 days
Location of rash

 

Location of lymph node

Spreading from the face to other parts of the body, mostly on the extremities, especially the palms and soles. During the recent outbreak, more patients got infected through sexual intercourse, so the rash first appeared near the genitals

* lymph node swelling

Mainly on the face and the ends of the extremities

 

 

 

 

 

Spreading from the face, scalp to the trunk and extremities, and then to the whole body

 

 

 

Other distinctive symptoms

 

Serious lymphadenectasis

Vesicle size: 1-2.5 cm

Vesicle size: 0.2-0.5cm May cause lymphadenectasis

Vesicle size: 0.2-0.4cm

 

Duration of symptoms 2-4 weeks 2-3 weeks 4-7 days

 

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