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Human monkeypox: disease pattern, incidence and attack rates in a rural area of northern Zaire.

TLDR
The results of epidemiological features of 91 monkeypox patients reported in Bumba zone in northern Zaire during the period 1981 to 1985 are presented, indicating its limited public health importance even in a well-known enzootic area.
Abstract
Human monkeypox is a zoonosis that occurs sporadically in the tropical rainforest of western and central Africa. This article presents the results of epidemiological features of 91 monkeypox patients reported in Bumba zone in northern Zaire during the period 1981 to 1985. Their age ranged from 7 months to 29 years (93% below 15 years of age). 11% of patients had visible smallpox vaccination scars. Deaths occurred sporadically; the overall case-fatality rate was 9%. 91 patients arose in 61 separate outbreaks; 42 of them consisted of only a single case. The source of infection was suspected to be animal for 70 cases, and human for the remaining 21 cases. The illness occurred in all months of the year. There was a considerable clustering of cases in the northern part of the zone. The average annual incidence rate in the observed zone was 0.63 cases per 10,000 population with marked differences in age, time and place. The average annual primary attack rate among unvaccinated individuals (1.7/10,000) sharply contrasted with those vaccinated (0.04/10,000). The secondary attack rate for contacts without vaccination scar (4.3%) differed significantly from those who had been vaccinated in past (0.7%). Many unvaccinated contacts living under conditions of maximal exposure to index cases escaped not only the disease but also infection. The low incidence rate of human monkeypox indicates its limited public health importance even in a well-known enzootic area.

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2007 Guideline for Isolation Precautions: Preventing Transmission of Infectious Agents in Health Care Settings.

TL;DR: The ability of hospital ventilation systems to filter Aspergillus and other fungi following a building implosion and the impact of bedside design and furnishing on nosocomial infections are investigated.

Guideline for isolation precautions: preventing transmission of infectious agents in healthcare settings 2007.

TL;DR: The ability of hospital ventilation systems to filter Aspergillus and other fungi following a building implosion and the impact of bedside design and furnishing on nosocomial infections are investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

The detection of monkeypox in humans in the Western Hemisphere.

TL;DR: This investigation documents the isolation and identification of monkeypox virus from humans in the Western Hemisphere and suggests that the prairie dogs had been exposed to at least one species of rodent recently imported into the United States from West Africa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical Characteristics of Human Monkeypox, and Risk Factors for Severe Disease

TL;DR: In this article, a confirmed case of monkeypox was found in 34 patients, 5 (15%) were defined as severely ill, and 9 (26%) were hospitalized for 148 hours; no patients died.
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