Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Monkeypox
Episode Date: May 31, 2022You may be worried we’re headed into another global health crisis in the form of Monkeypox. But it’s not new, and we already know quite a bit about it. Dr. Sydnee explains what it is, how to treat... it, and the recommendations at the moment from the CDC, all compared to COVID (which is now unfortunately our standard for how to relate to potential public health threats).Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/
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Saw bones is a show about medical history, and nothing the hosts say should be taken as medical advice or opinion.
It's for fun. Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil?
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that weird growth. You're worth it.
Alright, talk is about books.
One, two, one, two, three, four. We came across a pharmacy with a toy and that's busted out.
We were sawed through the broken glass and had ourselves a look around.
Some medicines, some medicines that escalate my cop for the mouth. Hello everybody and welcome to Saul Bones, a marital tour of Miss Guide in medicine. I'm your co-host Justin McAroy.
And I'm Sydney McAroy
I didn't know that.
I was supposed to sing.
I'm Sydney McAroy.
Perfect. Okay, you got, you saw exactly the resolution to the melody that I was going for there. Oh, boy. Perfect.
Okay.
You got, you saw exactly the resolution to the melody that I was going for there.
That was great.
That's going to be the new intro.
No.
I don't think so.
Um, Sydney, I'm so excited to be back here with you.
Although I wish contextually, um, I just can't believe we're back here.
I can't believe we got a new, I just can't believe we're back here. I can't believe we got a new thing. I just can't believe there's new things said.
Before you talk, before you say anything.
Not a new thing.
Before you say anything about monkeypox,
can I just ask something to Gaia or the universe?
Okay.
Or Jesus Christ, could we not,
just, could we not?
I saw monkey pox, and they're like second case confirm,
all the, I feel like the terminology
that has become so loaded, you know, cases
and confirmed cases and all that stuff,
but it's not about COVID, It's about monkey pox.
So here's the thing I'm asking everybody and everything
and that all the multiverse, could we not?
Could we just not do this one?
Could we not do this one?
Well, okay, first of all, monkey pox isn't new.
This isn't a novel virus.
Then why is Alexa on my back about it?
Well, I mean,
Hey, Jamie, did you hear the news about monkey box?
Stop it.
Well, it's existence in the multiple countries
that we are seeing outbreaks.
Well, I shouldn't even say outbreaks, cases.
And that is new.
It is in countries it has not previously been.
Yes. But it's the existence of monkey boxes is new. It is in countries it has not previously been. Yes.
But it's the existence of monkey pox isn't new.
I should say, I think it's important to say that,
and I'll talk about it more,
but there are people who have been dealing
with monkey pox for quite a while.
They just don't live here.
So we didn't pay as much attention to it.
Very classic. Classic, classic America,
and I'll be honest, classic me.
So I am, and now it is a big deal
because I've been alerted to it
as I think a lot of people can relate to.
Now, here's what I'm gonna say.
I don't know what your research is on this.
I don't know how you're gonna catch this,
but I'm gonna tell you straight up,
I'm gonna be reading the alarm bells
for the entire episode because, hear me out.
Because we did it.
We did it with COVID and we had to add on our face.
I feel like this time, we go hard on the alarm bells,
really freaking people out.
If it doesn't turn into a bad thing,
everyone's relieved.
No one gets mad at that person.
Who they get mad at is the person who's like,
I think by Easter, the churches will be filled with people
again, wouldn't that be lovely?
Because you all can't get any yet.
So I just say I'm gonna go hard monkey pots.
It's a very bad thing and it's extremely bad.
Well, I don't think we should alarm people on
that ship sale.
But you're right in the sense that it's interesting to see
as stories of this have been reported.
One of the major themes are like reporters asking government officials
in multiple countries, will there be nationwide quarantines
and or like lockdowns or shut down?
Like is that and it's so weird to think,
can you imagine asking that question
in 2019? Can you imagine talking about, you know, a rare virus that has occurred in, you know,
not a huge number of people in a few parts of the world? Can you imagine a reporter at a press
conference asking, will we have a nationwide shutdown in response to this in 2019?
No, but we're all very good at it.
I know.
Well, it's interesting because you can immediately see that knee jerk that COVID has sort of
done to us.
Yes.
So I understand.
And knee jerk may not be.
And I know maybe that's a good, a positive repercussion of it is that it's something we're
a little bit more plugged into, which is a fun way of saying freaked out about.
The interconnectedness of the world and all the people in it is something that I hope we are all
much more tuned into and how are our actions or in actions, you know, greatly influence,
not just those immediately around us, but everyone. Yes.
And in a positive way, how making good decisions for yourself and those immediately around
you can have a ripple effect, a positive one.
So anyway, let's talk about monkey pox.
It's a pox virus.
Makes sense.
Orthopox virus, genius.
It's in there with good old smallpox. Good old smallpox
you says. Which bad, it's bad. Smallpox is bad. Smallpox is much worse than monkeypox.
Okay. That I can say definitively. There is not a smallpox outbreak. That's good.
As far as we know, smallpox exists only in a couple labs.
Maybe we should start doing episodes
about the things that aren't happening.
That would be kind of nice, wouldn't it?
We don't have a smallpox vaccine.
We seem to have polio pretty well licked.
Like, that would be nice.
Let's do that.
This would be some good apps.
Polio's licked in some places.
There's a lot.
So this is a box virus along with smallpox and calpox,
which we have talked about extensively on the show that hit of smallpox and calpox and their relationship to vaccines
We have known about this box monkey pox since 1958
There were some outbreaks of a strange illness among there were two groups of monkeys that were in like captivity and they saw this
Spreading throughout these monkeys. They called it monkey pox because you have to found it in monkeys.
That's actually not the like reservoir of monkey pox, meaning the animal that
carries it around.
They get it, but a rodent probably carries it.
It always my deep seated fear of rodents, it always pays off.
It's always on the money.
My gut is always right.
You're right to stay away, forbred it.
The person who identified it was Preben von Magnus, was the Danish virologist.
Good name.
Yeah, it is a good name.
He researched the polio vaccine, the flu,
and also, of course, he was the first one to confirm.
This is Monkey Pox.
They were actually a crab eating macaque monkeys,
in case you're curious.
I was.
Yeah.
And so that was when we figured out monkey pox in 1958,
like, hey, this is a thing monkey's get it
It looks like smallpox. It looks like cowpox. It looks like all the pox's in there with other pox's we get it and then in
1970 we diagnosed a case in a human so that's when we figured out like oh, oh like cowpox it can get we can get cowpox as humans
and so
This was actually during the,
this would have been during the era
of like smallpox elimination.
Remember as we were trying to wipe that.
Remember when we eradicated a virus?
That was cool.
Remember when we could,
Remember when we worked together as a planet
to rid the,
rid humanity of a deadly scourge.
I can survive.
You know what, it's sad,
but I did think that COVID would like
rat. I thought it would heal us in a sense in a way. I know I didn't predict it would be yet
another dividing line. I really did think that there would be a sort of like he saw after September
11th, like a sort of like, what have we been doing? Like let's try to work it out. Well, I wouldn't
say that was everyone's experience after September 11.
Certainly not, but there was a healing. We call them freedom fries.
Remember? Yeah.
Remember?
Remember there's that we also, we also, we also, we also, we also,
the mission was a complex advantage of that to, to use the government.
Yeah, yeah, later.
That was a good, unprecedented manner,
invade the privacy of citizens.
And detain.
You all remember people, we are still on the space.
On perhaps their skin color or nation of origin,
or ethnicity, or the language they speak or the religious
practices.
But they fall in college.
Do you remember that part?
I was in college so at the time it seemed to me that the nation is healing.
Right.
Of course.
Of course.
Anyway.
You don't know.
Since then, okay, so they found a case in a human in 1970 when they were working
on the smallpox program and they found a case of monkeypox.
And since then, most of the cases have been in certain African countries, either in the
Democratic Republic of Congo.
There have been some in Cameroon in the Central African Republic, Gabon, Nigeria. Sort of like we know where monkey pox cases have been occurring. Occasionally,
you would see like a travel related case outside of these countries, but it was very, very clearly
like someone came from one of those places where they got monkey pox there, but we diagnosed it somewhere else.
So it was it was pretty clear where
sort of the reds of war like what like I said, it was probably some sort of rodent
There's a couple different rodents that can get it and then it would pass from them to like a non-human primate or to a human and
There you go monkey pox. The symptoms so that you know what we're talking about
And there you go, monkeypox. The symptoms so that you know what we're talking about,
that so first of all, they show up within a week or two
from exposure, but it can be up to three weeks.
That's always tricky as we've learned
for like contact tracing, right?
Because you got a large period of time
and you're not gonna identify somebody who's sick immediately.
And the initial symptoms are pretty non-specific.
You get a fever, you get some chills, a headache,
some muscle ache, some fatigue,
probably some swollen lymph nodes.
That's a pretty distinct thing that you could notice.
But generally, you're probably just gonna think
like you got the flu or something
until a few days after those initial symptoms
when the rash starts.
The rash, and if you look up pictures of a monkey pox rash,
it looks very similar to if you've ever seen historical pictures of a small pox rash
It starts on the face typically it can spread
It's more on the extremities in the face than it is on the central part of the body and it has a very predictable
Evolution of the lesions it goes from
Maccule to papule to vesicle to pustule to scab
Which is something I memorized a long
time ago in medical school and I've never forgotten.
And it can't appear on the palms and soles, which is, that's a unique feature to some
rashes that can help you distinguish it from other rashes.
Are you looking at pictures?
I said I shouldn't remember.
So it starts with like a flat, that's a macule, something like a flat lesion that you
can see, but not really feel, it goes to aules, who are raised lesion, a vesicle is when it's filled with fluid, like a
clear fluid, a push-jewels when it's filled with like a an opaque...
Push. Push. Yeah, purulent fluid. And then it usually will
umbilicate, meaning there's like a little dot in the top of it, you can see that on
some of them, and it's kind of firm, and then that will scab and crust over. And then once the scabs fall off, that's when you're no longer contagious,
but also it can scar. Much like spa pox, you know, famously was known to do to scar people.
These can as well, they don't, not every single one, but they can. And it's typically pretty painful.
The rash itself, it will become itchy towards the scab phase but it can be painful initially.
It lasts two to four weeks.
Historically, depending on which there's two
clades of the virus, there's another classification basically and
clade? A clade. Okay. And one clade is known to be a little more severe,
a little more transmissible than the other,
but it can be up to 10% fatal.
So it's big, big number.
Now, of course, this also depends a lot on how quickly
you identify it and what other complicating factors
for that patient themselves and what supportive,
sort of like medical interventions
you have, what resources you have near.
There are some cases that have lists that where medical resources are a little more thin,
right? Exactly. So it plays into that, right?
Precisely. So is that, is that number related to the virus itself or is it related to a lack of
resources? It depends. It's passed by large respiratory droplets.
This is different than COVID.
I feel like for such a long time,
we're gonna be comparing everything we talk about to COVID,
which we don't normally do.
Well, we didn't do that previously, right?
It wasn't like every time we talked about a virus or bacteria,
we naturally compared it to one single thing.
Because this is so unlike COVID. It's so far from COVID, but we're gonna compare it because it to one single thing. Cause this is so unlike COVID.
It's so far from COVID,
but we're gonna compare it cause it's on our minds.
It has passed by large respiratory droplets.
So unlike COVID, which we knew,
eventually you could get from just being
in the same room with someone.
With monkeypox, it really requires some prolonged
like face-to-face contact for transmission.
I mean, either that or like some bodily fluids,
or like this virus can actually live on surfaces longer
than COVID, like it actually, you know,
we, that was one of our concerns initially,
why we wiped down all of our groceries and stuff
in the beginning of the pandemic.
With smallpox or with monkeypox,
withpox viruses, both monkeypox in this case,
if you sleep in a bed and you've got some of these lesions,
some of that material can get into the bedding
and then somebody else sleeping in that bed
can be inhaling some of that,
I mean, you can pass it that way.
So it can live on
surfaces longer. And so like contaminated bedding is a way that you could pass this, which wouldn't be
true for COVID. With animal to human transmission, which obviously occurs, scratches or bites, or if
you're eating meat from one of these animals, and it isn't prepared properly that kind of thing. There's could all be ways that it can be that you can get it.
But again, all of this is harder to get.
It is harder to get monkey pox much, much harder than it is to get COVID.
Okay. That's good.
You can pass it human to human,
but not as easily by any stretch as other viruses like COVID.
There is no specific treatment at this time for monkey pox.
A lot of it would be supportive.
And I should say most people are going to have a self limited course.
They're going to get sick.
They're going to get better.
That's it.
Okay.
For most people, they won't require a lot of medical intervention or support during that
time period. Some are going to have
more severe disease. It could be because they have an underlying illness or immunocompromise
that kind of reason. There are some things that we've used in these cases like medications
that were developed for smallpox. It can work for monkeypox to an extent. They're not specifically
for monkeypox, but you can use them. And again, a lot of supportive medical care can help
to prevent this from being a fatal illness for the majority of patients.
There is a vaccine. Oh. Interesting, right? Yeah. That's why this isn't novel. There
is a vaccine. It is a vaccine that is probably around 85% effective. We haven't had these
large-scale outbreaks of monkeypox, right?
Right. But it's a smallpox vaccine. It's a vaccineeavirus, which is what we
use for the smallpox vaccine. It's all in the same...
Is it a vaccinee of the same root, do you know?
It was called the vaccineeavirus, because it was used for vaccines.
Oh, okay. Yeah. So, or, well, or vaccine came from the vaccine virus I should say okay.
Vaccine virus reverse that I said that wrong vaccine is named for the
vaccine virus got it yes so anyway they're all in that same orthopox virus
genus all in there together and you can use the same vaccine to protect you
against both okay but most of us certainly haven't gotten the smallpox vaccine.
Some people have to pay down what your age is.
Some people were vaccinated as children.
We wouldn't have gotten that.
And it's important to know that unlike the COVID vaccine,
which is incredibly safe and effective.
The smallpox vaccine, which can be extremely effective,
certainly as does have some risks for some people.
Okay.
And this monkeypox vaccine in deciding like,
the reason we don't just vaccinate everybody, right?
Why don't we just keep doing this?
If we have a vaccine and a virus exists, let's just give everybody that too.
Well, one of the reasons you might not decide to do that other than like it's not very common
there, would be are there any risks to the vaccine?
And in this case, there are some risks to the vaccine.
They're extremely rare, but there are some pretty serious things that can happen in specific patients.
And so it's a conversation, right?
Now, if you've been exposed to monkeypox,
it's not as much of a conversation.
If you've been directly exposed to some of monkeypox,
you probably should, there's a time,
like there's a window in which you can still get the vaccine.
You're kidding, really?
Yeah, unlike COVID, which you need to be vaccinated before you're exposed, with monkeypox,
you can actually get vaccinated after you've been exposed and it is effective and protective.
Yes, because it has such a long incubation period, there's a window there, also just
because of the nature of this vaccine.
It's a live attenuated virus vaccine.
So, but this is really helpful when trying to stop the spread and prevent illness and
death, that you have that window.
And that's some other vaccines work that way, but that's a pretty helpful, unique thing.
That's why we can give somebody a tetanus shot after they maybe have been exposed to tetanus,
right?
Oh, right.
Okay.
You step on a resting ale, we tell you you need a tetanus shot.
Yeah, that makes sense.
It still works, even though perhaps you've already been exposed.
This isn't the first time we've seen monkey pox in the US.
Okay. And I want to tell you about a time that we did before and how that worked out.
But before I do that, I do have to take you to the billing department.
Uh, let's go. It's 15th anniversary. It was a couple months ago, but we forgot.
Yeah, completely.
Our silly show is 15 years old.
That makes it old enough to get its learners permit
and almost old enough to get the talk.
Wow, I hope you got the talk before then.
A lot of things have changed in 15 years.
Our show's not one of them.
We're never changing and you can't make us.
Jordan Jesse Goat, the same forever show is not one of them. We're never changing and you can't make us. Jordan
Jesse go the same forever at MaximumFun.org or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm going first. It's me Jackie K.
Shud. Man, she's always is bossy.
I'm Laura Kilhart. We're a bunch of standup comics and we've been doing comedy like 60 years total.
But we look amazing.
We drop every Monday on Max Fun and it's called the Jackie Laurie Show and you
could listen to it and learn about comedy and learn about anchor management and
all the things.
And Jackie is married but childless and I'm unmarried but child full.
So together, we need one complete woman.
Is that just what you're looking at?
Yeah.
And we try to make Kyle laugh just like that and say, oh my god, every episode.
It's a good job.
Jackie and Laurie show.
Monday's only on maximum fun.
All right Sidney as I understand it, we have
battled this the monkey. Now is it, have there been cases in the US?
The first case is that mean, the first cases
that we really saw outside of Africa were in the US,
like certainly the first outbreak in 2003.
Basically, all around the same time,
we saw people in multiple different states,
actually Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri,
and Ohio, and Wisconsin.
People in all these areas got sick around the same time.
And again, like when you start with those initial symptoms
for the first couple of days,
most people probably wouldn't even go to the doctor.
Or if they did, your doctor certainly wouldn't be thinking
monkey box, but then the rash.
And the rash is so distinctive that that pretty quickly
clued people in, especially health departments in these states
that, oh, something is going on.
So what they were able to do fairly quickly
is figure out that, and there would be 47 people in all,
by the way, who got sick,
that all of these people had come in contact
recently with prairie dogs.
of these people had come in contact recently with prairie dogs.
Another rodent pops its head up, if you will, on sobans
and is the villain yet again. Prairie dogs, carriers of plague and pox viruses.
Yep.
What was discovered was that there was a shipment
of 800 animals sent from Ghana to Texas, mostly
like small mammals, and they included a number of rodents.
Some of these, like one of them is called the giant pouch rat.
I have to imagine you don't ever want to look at that.
Like you probably shouldn't.
Sorry, what is it called?
Giant pouched.
Oh, now that you said it.
Like has a pouch pouched.
Pouched? Oh no, for carrying more smaller rats inside of it.
Aww.
Are they cute?
You like them?
He's not, they're not that, look at, they're kind of, they're heroes.
They, they go, you know what they do?
What?
They help for landmines.
Aww.
They sniff out landmines.
Well, they are heroes.
They're heroes.
They are, they are heroes that can carry monkey pox.
Well, everybody's got their strengths and weaknesses.
It's just,
Hey, fellas, and some of us are heroes
that can carry all kinds of,
Yeah, yeah, like, you know,
Yeah, I'm a, I'm a,
I'm a known many of us got COVID in the last two years
and we can still be heroes.
I'm a, I'm a notary public
and I could probably still get COVID.
I haven't, but I could, by that. So there were some of those in the
shipment. There were some door mice. There were some rope squirrels.
Anyway, a bunch of different. I don't know any more of these. I got lucky with
this big boy. I'm not taking this other spin. It should also be noted that
Justin's fear of rodents is indirectly related to the size of the rodent.
So the smaller the rodent, the greater the fear.
Right. Yes.
Yes, the smallness of it is what freaks me out.
If I like yesterday we saw who is that big boy in our yard?
It's a groundhog.
Groundhog is a rodent, right?
Probably, I don't know.
It's not an animal show.
Well, that's just the zoo of us. But like he didn't scare me because he was a big boy.
He just hung out in our backyard and ate clover. Hey, clover. Come on, but no problem.
Get yourself a snack. No big deal. Um, this is how West Virginia. I am.
I said, Oh, let's eat dinner out on the porch so that we can watch the groundhog eat clover.
Oh, that's me. Uh, anyway, so there were some dormice and rope squirrels.
They were sent to different facilities, including some that were put in a facility in Illinois
with other small mammals, including some prairie dogs.
So what they found is that some of these like pouch, giant pouch rats and dormice and
whatnot had already gotten monkey pox in Ghana. They've been sent
over to Texas and then spread to these other states and infected prairie dogs in these
sort of housing facilities. And then the prairie dogs were sold as pets to people and they
got monkey pox from their prairie dogs. And they were pretty quick to figure this out
and then start, they did note by the way
that most of the people who got sick
actually had direct contact with the animals
as opposed to contact with the people
who had contact with the animals that can happen.
But for the most part, it was people
who had direct contact holding these animals.
And especially if they had some sort of break
in the skin or something.
So they were able to see that it really required a lot of close contact to get it from the rodent or from another person whatever.
The response from the government was pretty quick. The CDC kind of led
the USDA, the FDA state health departments. They all worked together to like
find all the people, all the pets,
all the contacts of the people in the pets, test everybody, quarantine everybody.
They stopped allowing the import of these animals for a little while.
There was one family who had gotten two of them for Mother's Day.
It was like, I don't know.
And a centric mom, it's fine.
And of course they all quarantined.
And one of their Prairie Dogs was able to survive
the monkey pox, chuckles, and stay, I guess,
part of the family.
That's nice.
That's very nice.
Chuckles lived to tell the story.
And then, and they used the smallpox vaccine they had available at the time
to like vaccinate other people who had been exposed to stop the spread. It's like this ring
vaccination sort of method. They use this to eradicate smallpox where you create a ring of
immunity around an outbreak to stop it from spreading any further if you
can kind of visualize what they're doing.
So they did the same thing.
About 30 people on all receive a vaccine, so not a ton of people had to get it.
There were a couple of cases in the US back in 2021, actually, just last year, again,
very clearly related to travel.
The current outbreak.
So what is happening right now?
Why are we talking about monkey pox? Because there have been clusters of cases outside the usual parts of the world where
they occur. 20 other countries so far that we know of, between two and three-n-ter cases somewhere
in there, including Australia, multiple parts of Europe, the US of course Canada. In the US there've been 10 cases in eight states. So California, Colorado, Florida, Massachusetts, New
York, Utah, Virginia, Washington. Okay. That is where it is. Currently and in
each of those states is either one or two cases so far. Like I said, there are
the two clades of monkeypox. One clade being the central African clade
and one being the West African clade.
The central African clade is the one
that is considered generally to be more severe
and more transmissible.
The ones we are seeing currently around the world
are part of the West African clade,
which we think probably doesn't have that 10%
fatality rate, probably something lower than that. So less severe, less transmissible, that's a good thing.
And why are we seeing them?
We're still figuring that out, right?
Like, they're still in the middle of trying to investigate
how is this happening?
Why is this happening?
Is it just some sort of bizarre one off thing or what's going on?
There probably was some travel at the beginning of this, right? Someone traveled somewhere,
but we don't know. Sometimes with outbreaks, if it's a small enough number, we figure it out, right?
Yeah, right. We figure out the index case.
Kind of while the people can do that.
Yeah, who went from where to where to carry this?
We don't know that answer, but probably there was something like that that then has spread
to household contacts and close contacts and things like that.
There's been a lot of information publicized about the risk specifically to men who have
sex with men.
I don't know if you've seen that, that that is sort of what they're reporting
as a population where this is spreading currently,
which is always concerning when you start to hear
that sort of rhetoric,
something that is being publicized as just
a problem for the gay community.
I think we have historically seen enough danger
from that sort of thinking.
It is probably coincidental that that's where we saw it.
It was just there were certain close contacts
among these index cases and they also happened
to be men who have sex with men.
So I think it's important to remember that before that becomes part of the narrative because again, you know, men who have sex with men. So I think it's important to remember that
before that becomes part of the narrative,
because again, we know how quickly
that can become part of the narrative
and be incredibly damaging to both the people
who it's about, men who have sex with men,
and everybody else who may be at risk
who no longer thinks they are at risk
because they're not part of that community.
The CDC recommendations for the public mentioned that specifically, again, which what they
say is that you should be concerned if you've traveled to a country where monkey box cases
have been reported.
Although, man, that's such a wild thing to say because like the US, like the entire country
of the United States of America.
Yeah, it's a big country.
I went to Cincinnati a few months ago, does that count?
If you have contact with a person who is a similar rash
or a diagnosis of Monkipox, of course,
and if you're a man who has had closer intimate
in-person contact with other men in the past month,
including through an online website,
digital application app, or at a bar of party.
Thank you, CDC.
Wait, is the CDC...
Thank you, CDC.
I'm just saying that dudes are catching monkey pox to grinder.
Is that what it's saying?
I know that's not what they mean.
I love the CDC.
I know they're smart in that.
I know that's not what they mean, but that could probably be weird word it also. No, you don't have
to say it's not what they're trying to say. If you are having
anonymous sex with someone through an app is what they're trying to address. Yeah, you meet people through
they know you meet people through the app and then you have sex with the usual stuff, right?
Like it's not, you're not getting it from cybering, right?
They understand that.
This is a classic scientific problem
in which like the people behind this,
no, yes they know, they're smart people, they're scientists.
Communication isn't always the strong suit
of the scientific community.
But there's I think I have said that many times on this show.
This is why I mean, I always say that I think you're the best science
communicator on the planet.
And I think that you've backed that up many times.
I do have to say it's not the highest ball.
Like do they not have a person who's like, y'all this sounds like you are saying monkeypox
is communicated through like tender or grinder
or whatever you have to stop.
E-Harmony is going to Sula,
Srikas, you are saying that this disease is
communicated digitally, it's like a cyber virus.
It is weird.
Oh, I got, oh me, I got cyber amongst you all.
I think this is, it's even worse.
It's unnecessary to mention,
because I don't think we need to know
like the meet cute that led to you guys doing it.
Yeah, who does it find like-
That's the fight like-
That's the fight like-
This doesn't apply to me.
I'm at a guy through Grindr.
Certainly that doesn't count.
What do they mean?
I'm included in it because I found it concerning. You gotta get over there. To the CDC in many instances.
But this probably could be reworked here, my science friends.
There has been renewed government interest in purchasing smallpox vaccine.
Recently, they deny, adamantly, this has anything to do with the current monkeypox outbreak,
that this was already something that was like ongoing.
Like, we were gonna buy these smallpox vaccines anyway, and this is just, like, the deal
is just closing now
and the timing's weird, we get it, but
they're not currently offering the vaccine
to someone who's been exposed in the US like routinely.
I'm assuming that's about to change
as we see more cases, I would guess.
They're already doing that in the UK I've read.
But there's a thought that if you got
the smallpox vaccine as a kid, that
that probably provides a little bit of protection, limited protection, not complete, but you would
still need like, if we were going to vaccinate people, it's a two shot deal.
If you got the smallpox vaccine as a kid, you probably just need one now, like a booster,
basically.
And this was anecdotally observed
during the 2003 outbreak.
They tended to notice that younger patients
had a little bit of a worse time with it.
And they thought it was because perhaps
some of the older patients had gotten
the smallpox vaccine as a kid.
Like I said, it's a live attenuated virus,
a vaccineia virus, and it's called Jeneos.
In case you're interested in looking
it up and reading about it, it was just approved for monkeypox in like 2019.
US officials are debating at this moment, like, should we, because people are getting sick,
they're going to go to doctors and hospitals, and they're going to expose staff there, perhaps,
and you know, you can wear your personal protective equipment and all that stuff, but
should those people get vaccinated,
like the healthcare workers?
I think we're gonna hear recommendations about this
pretty quickly coming out because we didn't have any,
because we didn't have monkeypox here in this country.
A couple of other issues which I have alluded to,
scientists and doctors in the parts of Africa
where this exists have been trying to get people to pay
attention to it for a long time and have been doing research on it without a lot of
outside support or resources or interest or anything because it didn't affect them.
Now all of a sudden everybody's very interested in monkeypox which I can only imagine is incredibly
frustrating for the doctors and scientists in Central and Western Africa who have been saying, yeah, thank you, who
have actually said for a while, you know, like there could be outbreaks of this. Like,
I know that we're not seeing a ton of it right now, but all it would need was, would
be a little shift to be gone a little bit more transmissible. And, you know, it's even
if it's not incredibly fatal,
you do get very sick and as we read with smallpox,
the scarring that can be left behind by some of these rashes
can be pretty, you know, in terms of just like,
you're feelings about yourself and your body image
and all those things can be pretty devastating.
So there are a lot of African scientists who would say
we should have been paying attention to this
like a long time ago.
It's frustrating.
Some of my favorite podcasters have recently been acting
like this is a new thing that is just started happening.
When really me and some other conscientious
podcasting friends have been saying like no,
this is like not a new problem.
It's just, you know, we're finally paying attention because it's affecting us.
And I think I just think that's, I just think that's really sad.
But I'm, you know, I guess it's just human nature, I guess.
We can't, we can't be too mad at people like that, I guess.
Or tweet at them or anything.
I think we can all agree on that.
It's a time to heal.
What I would say about monkeypox is that we understand
this virus a lot better than we did at the beginning
of the COVID pandemic, certainly, right?
We knew about coronavirus says, we knew about related
coronavirus, we didn't know what we were dealing with,
yeah, with COVID, you just, it was brand new.
It was novel, it's in the name.
So this, we definitely have a little bit of an advantage
in the sense that we already know about it.
We have a vaccine.
It is not as transmissible, certainly as COVID.
And we have a history of containing these outbreaks
pretty quickly in the past.
There was a recent, like I thought I saw a very recent article
that was really suggesting that if you're sick
with monkeypox, which I can't imagine,
so few people are worldwide that if you're listening
to this podcast, you probably don't have monkeypox,
but there was a recommendation to stay away from your pets, because that could be an issue.
If you do have like small rodent pets and you give your monkey box to your pet, then your pet could give it to other pets or to other people.
You know, we could, that could continue the outbreak. And that's always a problem with any sort of virus that can exist in both humans and animals.
You've got multiple reservoirs to kind of trade it back and forth.
So that's been a recommendation. And again, because of surface transmission, that's another issue with betting and stuff like that.
But all in all, if we act quickly and we are smart about it and do things that sciences
shown us and experiences shown us work, we can respond to this in a very
responsible, helpful, humane way and not stigmatize any specific communities or allow, I don't know, fear over vaccines, quarantines, government
overreach, whatever your particular flavor of concern is to get in the way of keeping
people healthy and safe.
Thank you so much for listening to our podcast.
We hope you've enjoyed yourself.
Thanks to taxpayers for using their song Medicines as the intro've enjoyed yourself. Thanks to taxpayers that used to their song medicines
as the intro and outro program.
Hey, if you want to share the show,
we would really appreciate it,
especially when we're doing a topic that I think
people could be a little bit more informed about.
This is a great time to do it.
So just, you know, tweet about it,
share it on Facebook, rate and review
and your podcast platform of choice.
I know people always say that,
but it would really help us out.
And if you could do that, I think you'd be doing a little bit
to help us, which is huge, obviously, appreciate that.
But also, you know, science education,
that's important to you.
Sure, the show.
Appreciate it.
Thanks to the maximum fun network for having us
as a part of their extended podcasting family.
And thanks to you for listening.
That's gonna do it for us.
Until next time, my name is Justin McRoy.
I'm Sydney McRoy.
And as always, don't drill a hole in your head. Alright!