monkeypox treatment in “highly immunocompromised” patients, including those with advanced HIV, the CDC said.
Patients who are being treated for their HIV do not appear to have increased monkeypox risks, Anu Hazra, co-medical director of Howard Brown Health, a Chicago LGBT health provider, told the Post.
“While we know HIV impacts our immune system, we also know that not all people with HIV are the same,” Hazra noted.
The CDC report detailed particular monkeypox cases, including that of a Latino man in his 20s who tested positive after going to the emergency department with back pain and a rash. He was also positive for HIV and died after his condition quickly escalated with difficulty breathing and kidney failure, despite treatment with TPoxx and treatment for HIV in the hospital.
Another patient was a Black man in his 30s who had AIDS and was not being treated. He had a rash in July and was tested and treated for gonorrhea, chlamydia and syphilis. His lesions worsened, and he was admitted to the hospital with monkeypox, but discharged with a supply of TPoxx. He improved, but then worsened again and was hospitalized for an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection. He continued to bounce back and forth, eventually being readmitted again for his symptoms.
A white man in his 40s who had not been receiving treatment for AIDS also bounced between the hospital and release with treatment administered at varying times. He ultimately had a toe and part of one of his index fingers amputated despite multiple treatments. He remains hospitalized.
“This is an important description of severe consequences of monkeypox and should highlight the critical importance of getting vaccines, treatment and risk messaging to the communities who are most severely impacted,” Anne Rimoin, an epidemiologist at UCLA who has studied monkeypox for two decades, told the Post. “The disproportionate impact on communities that have less access to health services is the same story we see repeating itself locally and globally.”
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How to protect yourself
The CDC advises taking the following three steps to prevent getting monkeypox:
- Do not touch the rash or scabs of a person with monkeypox.
- Do not kiss, hug, cuddle or have sex with someone with monkeypox.
- Do not share eating utensils or cups with a person with monkeypox.
- Do not handle or touch the bedding, towels, or clothing of a person with monkeypox.
- Wash your hands often with soap and water or use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer, especially before eating or touching your face and after you use the bathroom.
If you experience a new or unexplained rash, you should:
- Avoid sex or being intimate with anyone until you have been checked out by a healthcare provider.
- If you don’t have a provider or health insurance, visit a public health clinic near you.
- When you see a healthcare provider, wear a mask, and remind them that this virus is circulating in the area.
- Avoid gatherings, especially if they involve close, personal, skin-to-skin contact.
You should also notify the people you have had close, personal, or sexual contact with during the last 21 days, including people you met through dating apps. To help stop the spread, you might be asked to share this information if you have received a monkeypox diagnosis.