WAKE UP!

HT to Siam

Saturday, January 26, 2008

World must wake up to pandemic disease threat

http://www.speroforum.com
Dr. Michael T. Osterholm, a frequent writer on such topics as avian flu and bioterrorism, said the world fails to fully understand the implications of such threats.

 

By East West Center

Much of the world, including governments, business and the news media, is “asleep at the switch” about one of the biggest threats to human existence ever known, a leading American specialist on infectious diseases said here this week.

Dr. Michael T. Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota and a frequent writer on such topics as avian flu and bioterrorism, said the world fails to fully understand the implications of such threats.“

Planning is poor,” Osterholm said. “People just assume business will run as normal — which it won’t! And no one, including the media, is paying attention.”

He spoke to a media conference sponsored by the East-West Center of Honolulu and co-hosted by the National Press Council of Thailand. To read an interactive blog on the conference proceedings, visit forum.eastwestcenter.org/mediaconference.

While the media has done lots of short-term reporting on the pandemic flu threat, it has largely failed to understand the larger, and quite terrifying, consequences of rapidly spreading disease, Osterholm said. For instance, an avian flu pandemic might directly claim a relatively limited number of lives, but the fallout from a pandemic could well be catastrophic

Just because these are small numbers, anyone who shrugs off the seriousness of this is a fool of history,” Osterholm said.

The fallout from a flu pandemic, he said, could include massive energy shortages around the world, a surge in other deadly infectious diseases, uncounted associated deaths due to shortage of medical supplies and treatment, and more.

The relatively fragile world health system could collapse, he said.

What drives the possibility of these catastrophic side-effects of a flu pandemic? It is in part, Osterholm said, because the world is vastly more interconnected today than it was during previous pandemics. What happens in one place will inevitably impact another.

In addition, he said, it is because the world economy has developed a “just-in time” approach to commodities, from medical supplies to food and energy, with the result that such resources are short and they can’t be easily moved around. “Energy, food, water, transportation, communications, equipment parts, security — all will be in short supply,” he said.

Even the systems to handle the remains of victims will be at risk of breaking down. “Cremation is a just-in-time industry,” Osterholm said.

But, said Osterholm, it’s an uphill fight. “The last time there was a commitment of sufficient time and energy was in World War II,” he said. “We don’t have that kind of commitment any more.”

WORLD MUST WAKE UP!

Will we all wake up in time?

Prepare

GetPandemicReady.org

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