Woman with Monkeypox shares her story

Nasty end-time plagues…The scars are permanent.

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Camille Seaton

Despite recovering from monkeypox, Camille Seaton finds herself hesitant to leave the house for long periods of time, having groceries and food delivered to her house.

The Georgia resident’s journey with the virus began on July 11 when she noticed several bumps forming on her face, assuming it was acne and disregarding it. “But that night, they already turned white. So I knew something was up,” Seaton, 20, tells PEOPLE.

After more bumps quickly appeared on her face, Seaton went to the hospital on July 16 for lab testing. She learned days later she had a confirmed case of monkeypox — one of the first in her state — and what she thought was acne were actually lesions. She says she believes she contracted the virus by constantly handling money at the local gas station she works at.

“I was touching a lot of money. The mask laws were lifted so we weren’t wearing any masks. I wasn’t wearing any gloves,” Seaton explains. “I just wasn’t being careful and I touched my face and my body and I’m transferring a whole bunch of germs subconsciously.”
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Monkeypox is transmitted by skin-to-skin contact, however experts say it can also spread by large respiratory droplets. According to Dr. Linda Yancey, infectious disease specialist at the Memorial Hermann Health System in Houston, it is “absolutely a possibility” for monkeypox to be transmitted through items like money as the virus can survive for days in an environment.

“So, monkeypox is a sibling of smallpox … This could absolutely be transmitted in that fashion,” Yancey tells PEOPLE. “And in fact, one of the cases in the U.S. was a lady who was exposed to bed linens. She cleans Airbnbs for a living. So any high touch items like money, doorknobs, shopping carts, have the potential for transmission.”

Seaton says she didn’t know anything about monkeypox until she contracted it and her symptoms escalated quickly while isolating at home. Along with the lesions, she experienced a fever, rash, headaches, fatigue, joint pain and muscle pain.

“It was uncomfortable. I was sanitizing everything, you know, like washing my hands every 15 minutes,” Seaton says. “The lesions on my face were the first to pop up and the bumps stayed on my face for a whole week and a half. And when my face started healing, bumps started appearing on my body.”

“I have a lot on my hands, so it was hard for me to do anything with my hands,” she adds. “I couldn’t hold my phone. I couldn’t do anything around the house. I couldn’t even fold my clothes. It was extremely painful.”
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Seaton explains that getting through the symptoms was just a waiting game since she was not offered the vaccine.

Monkeypox can be prevented with the Jynneos smallpox vaccine, which can also be effective after a person is diagnosed, according to the CDC. Along with the vaccine, medical professionals have also used antiviral treatments, such as tecovirimat (TPOXX), for monkeypox with patients who are more likely to get severely ill.

Despite medical staff being unable to provide any antiviral treatments for Seaton, she was prescribed amoxicillin and steroids because she was simultaneously diagnosed with strep throat. For Monkeypox, doctors just gave her Tylenol to break her fever.

“The healing process for monkeypox ranges from anywhere from two to four weeks, some people are fine in a week, some people are fine in two weeks, some people take the whole four weeks. In my case, I took three and a half weeks to heal,” she continues.
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“I was in contact with someone from the CDC and she was actually with me throughout the whole process,” Seaton notes. “I was checking in with her and sending pictures every time something changed up until I was healed.”

After weeks on a stay-at-home order, Seaton was cleared on August 1 after CDC officials said she was “officially past being contagious.” However, she still has reservations after recovering and doesn’t feel comfortable bringing her 3-year-old daughter back into the house yet.

Seaton tells PEOPLE that she’s had a “hard and emotional” few weeks and urges others to return to wearing masks and gloves, admitting that she wants the state to “lock us down again.”

“It really attacks you and takes a toll on you. It’s very, very painful. I want people to know that it’s here and it’s spreading. It’s not a joke,” Seaton says. “I can do what I can for the scars…they will fade but you will forever notice that they’re there.”

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/woman-extremely-painful-monkeypox-says-193648606.html

Hii ni ugonjwa ya mashoga. As straight as @Wanaruona no need to worry. Mighty God punish those homosexual bila huruma.

Dalmatian Evolution.

Alimwagiwa na ghey man after BJ na hataki kusema ukweli ana blame masks na kushika pesa. bladfwakin woman. Tumeshika pesa tangu tuzaliwe sijawahi kua mgonjwa.

OMG!

That’s the male whore beggar @Weyn after @kanguthu raped him up and infected him with this homosexual curse .
The sons of Satan should all die for all I care

The more things change the more they stay the same. Nothing new under the sun she will live and there’s makeup to cover scars. I don’t know much about this but isn’t it like chicken pox or small pox? Why is there stigma around is it sexually transmitted? It’s not the bubonic plague. It is like having boils, no fever like chicken pox, its just painful like a boil. Anyway, remember back in the day when you caught HIV you were as good as dead? The wasting away now that was a plague.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrAzU79PBVM

They are even transmitting it to innocent dogs. Damn fags!

Why can’t they just leave us alone. We don’t need their diseases.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(22)01487-8/fulltext#%20

Human monkeypox virus is spreading in Europe and the USA among individuals who have not travelled to endemic areas.
1
On July 23, 2022, monkeypox was declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern by WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
2
Human-to-human transmission of monkeypox virus usually occurs through close contact with the lesions, body fluids, and respiratory droplets of infected people or animals.
3
The possibility of sexual transmission is being investigated, as the current outbreak appears to be concentrated in men who have sex with men and has been associated with unexpected anal and genital lesions.
1
,
4
Whether domesticated cats and dogs could be a vector for monkeypox virus is unknown. Here we describe the first case of a dog with confirmed monkeypox virus infection that might have been acquired through human transmission.
Two men who have sex with men attended Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, Paris, France, on June 10, 2022 (appendix). One man (referred to as patient 1 going forward) is Latino, aged 44 years, and lives with HIV with undetectable viral loads on antiretrovirals; the second man (patient 2) is White, aged 27 years, and HIV-negative. The men are non-exclusive partners living in the same household.

Moreover, the virus that infected patient 1 and the virus that infected the dog showed 100% sequence homology on the 19·5 kilobase pairs sequenced.
The men reported co-sleeping with their dog.
They had been careful to prevent their dog from contact with other pets or humans from the onset of their own symptoms (ie, 13 days before the dog started to present cutaneous manifestations).

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