|
||||||||
|
Health & medicineMonkeypox patient may have infected Wis. nurseAssociated Press© St. Petersburg Times published June 13, 2003 MADISON, Wis. - A Wisconsin nurse may have contracted monkeypox from a patient in what would be the first known case of the disease spreading from one person to another in the United States, officials said Thursday. Wisconsin state epidemiologist Jeff Davis said health officials are testing tissue specimens to confirm whether the unidentified health care worker is infected with the exotic African virus. Until now, health officials investigating the weeklong outbreak in the United States have said that the virus was being spread by pet prairie dogs. But the disease can also be transmitted from one person to another, something that has happened in Africa. "In this case there was no animal exposure," Davis said of the health care worker. "The only contact was with a human." Davis would not release other details, but Patrice M. Skonieczny, infection control coordinator at St. Francis Hospital in Milwaukee, said the sick worker is a nurse at the hospital. Skonieczny said the nurse cared for a Milwaukee pet distributor who was being treated for a possible case of monkeypox. The nurse wore a mask, gloves and a gown when treating the patient, Skonieczny said. Last weekend, several days after caring for the patient, the nurse developed flu-like symptoms and a rash, but they "kind of faded away in a couple of days," Skonieczny said. The nurse has stayed home since developing the symptoms. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials said Thursday they are looking into the report of human-to-human transmission. "The issue right now is it's still early - we have not completed testing," CDC spokesman Llelwyn Grant said. Herb Bostrom, director of the state Bureau of Communicable Diseases, suggested that the finding is not necessarily reason for alarm. Monkeypox "spreads much more readily from animals to humans than it does from human to human," Bostrom said. "You're not going to get it from somebody sitting on the bus or walking down the hall." As of Thursday, U.S. health officials had confirmed a total of 12 human cases of the disease: four each in Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinois. Also, 54 possible cases had been reported - 25 in Indiana, 17 in Wisconsin, 11 in Illinois and one in New Jersey. No one has died from the disease in the United States. © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • Tampa Bay Times
490 First Avenue South St. Petersburg, FL 33701 727-893-8111
|
From the Times wire desk Columbia Column Health & medicine Iraq Nation in brief Recall World in brief
From the AP |
![]()