Indiana health officials on Thursday decided to offer smallpox
vaccine to people exposed to monkeypox, in line with a recommendation by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Indiana State Department of Health also said the number of
human monkeypox cases being investigated in the state has reached 33 -- four
confirmed cases and 29 suspected cases.
Indiana is the first state to announce it will make the smallpox
vaccine available to specific groups of people since the federal CDC made its
recommendation Wednesday. As of late Thursday, health officials in Illinois and
Wisconsin -- the two other states with significant numbers of human cases --
still were deliberating the issue.
Indiana will offer the vaccine to three groups of people:
health-care workers and caregivers in contact with someone suspected of having
monkeypox; people older than 1 who have been in contact with animals sick with
monkeypox or small mammals from dealers implicated in the outbreak; and people
who are investigating suspected human and animal cases of monkeypox.
By late Thursday, neither the state Health Department nor the
state Board of Animal Health had received any requests for the vaccine for
monkeypox purposes.
Indiana has a supply of smallpox vaccine from the national
bio-terrorism response program.
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-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
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