-
While there are no longer dozens of new cases a week, health experts say people should still be vigilant.
-
Recovering from monkeypox can take a financial toll. Abounding Prosperity is working with city officials to provide relief.
-
A flyer advertising a pop-up clinic for monkeypox vaccines in Dallas this month had information about the date, time, and location. It had a QR code so people could book appointments. But it also contained something disturbing: a cartoon drawing of a solitary African American man smiling about his new vaccine.
-
The case was confirmed at Arlington Heights High School. The district did not identify the person who tested positive, and it was not clear whether the case was in a student or an adult.
-
The person was immunocompromised, and officials said Tuesday they are trying to determine what role the virus played in the death. This is Texas' first death of someone with monkeypox.
-
Rates of new cases are declining in major cities, suggesting public health campaigns are working. But the spread
-
The number of monkeypox cases in Texas has surpassed 1,000 鈥 an increase of more than 50% since last week. The state鈥檚 count also includes Texas鈥 first presumptive pediatric case in Harris County.
-
Abounding Prosperity, Inc. is hosting monkeypox vaccine clinics this week in South Dallas to help prevent the spread of the virus.
-
Animal carriers of the virus include various rodents, dogs, primates, hedgehogs and shrews, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
-
There are more than 700 reported cases of the virus in Texas with dozens more 鈥減resumptive cases.鈥 Local officials said more vaccines should be headed to the state following a declaration by the White House that the virus is now a public health emergency.
-
Declaring a public health emergency can free up resources to help the administration respond to the monkeypox outbreak. So far more than 6,000 people in the U.S. have been infected.
-
四虎影院鈥檚 Sam Baker talked about the virus with Dr. Trish Perl, a Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center. She specializes in general infectious diseases.