GEORGETOWN, Guyana – Guyana Monday became the latest Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country to confirm a case of the Monkeypox virus, with health officials saying that the patient is hospitalized in a stable condition.
Health Minister Dr. Frank Anthony said health authorities are conducting contact tracing and that the patient, a man, lives in Region Four. He said contact tracing had been done, and several persons have since been quarantined.
“We are now working with the patient; the patient is stable, and we’ll continue working with that patient to make sure that everything is fine,” Dr. Anthony said in a video posted on the government’s Department of Public Information (DPI) website.
The patient has been admitted to the Ocean View Infectious Disease Hospital. He is in his 50s and was first suspected of being infected last weekend.
The Health Minister said the government is working with the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) to obtain test kits and a supply of vaccines from the lone global manufacturer.
Dr. Anthony said with the emergence of Guyana’s first case of Monkeypox, Guyana has activated its response.
This includes laboratories, trained laboratory personnel, and physicians trained to identify viral diseases. He says there is no need to panic, but he is appealing to Guyanese to take all precautions.
More than 42,000 cases have been detected in 95 countries, including Barbados, Jamaica, the Bahamas, and Bermuda.
The virus symptoms include a rash that initially looks like pimples or blisters and may be painful or itchy. Other symptoms of Monkeypox can consist of fever, chills, swollen lymph nodes,
Exhaustion, muscle aches, backache, headache, sore throat, nasal congestion, or cough.