Travellers From Nigeria Bring Monkeypox Virus To UK
According to the United Kingdom Health Security Agency (UKHSA), monkeypox is an uncommon viral infection that does not transmit readily between individuals. It is often a moderate “self-limiting sickness,” with the majority of patients recovering within a few weeks after contracting it. In other circumstances, serious sickness, on the other hand, might ensue.
The health authorities in the United Kingdom have identified a case of monkeypox, a virus that may be transmitted from sick animals such as rats to people, in a person who had recently been to Nigeria, where they are suspected to have contracted the illness.
According to the United Kingdom Health Security Agency (UKHSA), monkeypox is an uncommon viral infection that does not transmit readily between individuals. It is often a moderate “self-limiting sickness,” with the majority of patients recovering within a few weeks after contracting it. In other circumstances, serious sickness, on the other hand, might ensue.
Dr. Colin Brown, Director of Clinical and Emerging Infections at the United Kingdom Health and Safety Agency, said on Saturday that it is important to emphasize that monkeypox does not travel readily between individuals and that the overall risk to the general population is very low.
In collaboration with NHS England and the National Institute for Health and Social Care Improvement (NHSEI), we are contacting anyone who had close contact with the case prior to the patient’s infection being confirmed, assessing them if appropriate, and providing advice.” According to him, “the UKHSA and the NHS have well-established and rigorous infection control protocols for dealing with incidents of imported infectious illnesses, and these will be scrupulously adhered to.”
A dedicated isolation facility at St Thomas’ Hospital is being used to treat the patient, who is being cared for by professional clinical personnel who are following stringent infection control measures, according to Dr Nicholas Price, Consultant in Infectious Diseases at Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals.
The UKHSA specialists said that they are working closely with the state-funded National Health Service (NHS) in England and that they would be contacting persons who may have had close contact with the individual in order to offer information and health advice. Speaking with a lot of persons who were on the same trip to the United Kingdom as the patient and were close to him or her is part of this process.
Fever, headache, muscular pains, backaches, enlarged lymph nodes, chills, and weariness are some of the first signs of the illness. A rash may develop, which is most typically visible on the face and then spreads to other regions of the body. The rash varies and progresses through many phases until ultimately creating a scab, which eventually falls off the affected area.
When someone comes into intimate touch with an infected individual, the virus may be transferred. Broken skin, the respiratory system, or the eyes, nose, and mouth are all possible routes for the virus to enter the body and cause illness. The National Health Service (NHS) said that the sickness might be acquired through infected wild animals in portions of west and central Africa, and that it was suspected to be transferred by rats.
It was said by the UKHSA that persons who do not show symptoms are not considered contagious; nevertheless, as a precaution, those who have been in close proximity to the sick passenger are being called to ensure that if they do get ill, they may receive prompt medical attention.
Since then, health officials have verified a small number of instances of the monkeypox virus in the United Kingdom, which was the first time the virus has been detected in the country.