Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is much more likely to be molluscum than monkeypox. One is widespread and common in kids. The other one is not.
https://www.texaschildrens.org/blog/2011/12/molluscum-contagiosum-common-viral-skin-condition-children
The lesions do resemble molluscum but the internet said these lesions appear 7 weeks after exposure - I don’t know where he would have been exposed 7 weeks ago.
You can get molluscum anywhere. Most of the time people have no idea where their kid got it. And many many kids get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a troll.
Not a troll. Just a mom who is freaking out that her kid might have monkey pox.
Did you ask your kid if he had prolonged skin to skin contact with another person? This seems like a bigger issue to me…
That’s not the only mode of transmission. It can spread through the respiratory system or by contact with items used by the infected person, like sheets and towels.
It is, BY FAR, the most common mode of transmission.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is much more likely to be molluscum than monkeypox. One is widespread and common in kids. The other one is not.
https://www.texaschildrens.org/blog/2011/12/molluscum-contagiosum-common-viral-skin-condition-children
The lesions do resemble molluscum but the internet said these lesions appear 7 weeks after exposure - I don’t know where he would have been exposed 7 weeks ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is much more likely to be molluscum than monkeypox. One is widespread and common in kids. The other one is not.
https://www.texaschildrens.org/blog/2011/12/molluscum-contagiosum-common-viral-skin-condition-children
The lesions do resemble molluscum but the internet said these lesions appear 7 weeks after exposure - I don’t know where he would have been exposed 7 weeks ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a troll.
Not a troll. Just a mom who is freaking out that her kid might have monkey pox.
Did you ask your kid if he had prolonged skin to skin contact with another person? This seems like a bigger issue to me…
That’s not the only mode of transmission. It can spread through the respiratory system or by contact with items used by the infected person, like sheets and towels.
It is, BY FAR, the most common mode of transmission.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a troll.
Not a troll. Just a mom who is freaking out that her kid might have monkey pox.
Did you ask your kid if he had prolonged skin to skin contact with another person? This seems like a bigger issue to me…
That’s not the only mode of transmission. It can spread through the respiratory system or by contact with items used by the infected person, like sheets and towels.
It is, BY FAR, the most common mode of transmission.
Anonymous wrote:It is much more likely to be molluscum than monkeypox. One is widespread and common in kids. The other one is not.
https://www.texaschildrens.org/blog/2011/12/molluscum-contagiosum-common-viral-skin-condition-children
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a troll.
Not a troll. Just a mom who is freaking out that her kid might have monkey pox.
Did you ask your kid if he had prolonged skin to skin contact with another person? This seems like a bigger issue to me…
That’s not the only mode of transmission. It can spread through the respiratory system or by contact with items used by the infected person, like sheets and towels.
Anonymous wrote:Covid can cause skin rashes or blisters. Hopefully it's just covid only.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a troll.
Not a troll. Just a mom who is freaking out that her kid might have monkey pox.
Did you ask your kid if he had prolonged skin to skin contact with another person? This seems like a bigger issue to me…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a troll.
Not a troll. Just a mom who is freaking out that her kid might have monkey pox.
Anonymous wrote:1. Call the doctor; it might just be Covid but it can’t hurt.
2. Even if it is monkeypox the likelihood of truly bad outcomes is low assuming decent medical care and there are both vaccines and antivirals should your family need them.