After a third Australian was diagnosed with the potentially fatal disease, health officials are scrambling to determine the origins of a new monkeypox outbreak.
The man in his 50s had recently returned to Sydney from Queensland, but had no previous contact with the earlier instances in Melbourne or Sydney.
After a third Australian was diagnosed with the potentially fatal disease, health officials are scrambling to determine the origins of a new monkeypox outbreak.
The man in his 50s had recently returned to Sydney from Queensland, but had no previous contact with the earlier instances in Melbourne or Sydney.
NSW chief health officer Dr Kerry Chant said there was no cause for concern, insisting it was ‘a rare viral infection that does not spread easily between people’.
The case comes two weeks after Australia’s party scene was put on high alert after the nation recorded two cases of monkeypox which were believed to be sex-related.
The two men from Sydney and Melbourne both returned from Europe infected with the rare tropical disease.
The Victorian case was known to have been in the UK where there are currently 196 cases, which are mainly among men from the gay and bisexual community, with just two women infected.
Worldwide, WHO this week reported 377 confirmed or suspected cases in the unprecedented outbreak.
Dr Chant last month warned gay men in particular to watch out for symptoms – which include unusual rashes – and seek immediate help if worried.
‘We know it’s transmitted by that close skin to skin contact – you can be infectious and that close droplet contact in a very sort of close prolonged way,’ Dr Chant said.
‘We’re particularly urging men who are gay or bisexual, or men who have sex with men, to be aware of any unusual rashes or lesions and to contact by phone a sexual health clinic or GP without delay if they have any concerns.’
Urgent testing identified the Sydney man has been infected with a probable case of monkeypox and medics are now conducting follow up tests for final confirmation.
The Australian cases come after new cases were detected in Italy and Sweden, just days after nine cases were found in the UK.
The Italian patient tested positive at a hospital in Rome after returning from the Canary Islands and the Swede was diagnosed in Stockholm.