At the end of last April, there was yet another case of human monkeypox discovered in a 38-year old Nigerian man who was in Singapore at the time. It is thought that the man contracted the virus through eating contaminated meat at a wedding he attended in Nigeria. When it was discovered that the man had the virus, the Singapore authorities quarantined him to contain the infection and provide treatment for his condition.
Monkeypox was first discovered in 1958 during the outbreak of a pox-like disease occurring in an area where monkeys were being kept for research premises. In 1970, the first human case was reported from the Democratic Republic of Congo, leading to medical staff renaming the disease to human monkeypox. The disease has mostly been confined to countries in central and western Africa and, after that initial case, there have been three more occasions where the disease has been found to have spread to humans.
The risk of fatality is just 1-10% in humans who contract human monkeypox, with most of those who die from the disease being infants.