| NOT PANIC, BUT PRUDENCE
The death of a 23-month-old Mexican boy in Texas
was the first confirmed fatality from swine flu in
the United States, further raising concern about the
rapid spread of the disease.
Indeed, the threat of swine flu is real and serious.
The number of confirmed swine-flu cases is approaching
100 nationally.
About 150 people have died from the disease in Mexico
- the epicenter of the outbreak. An additional 2,000
there are believed to be infected with swine flu.
The stock market, travel industry, and other businesses
have been impacted.
However, the growing global alarm needs to be tempered
to avoid panic, while also increasing public awareness,
safety measures, and swift responses.
After some alarm, a vacationer hospitalized in Philadelphia
turned out not to have swine flu. Meanwhile, some
probable cases await confirmation in New Jersey and
Delaware.
In the Caribbean, Belize is reporting suspected cases
of swine flu and has cancelled major public events.
In Barbados, Minister of Health Donville Inniss also
confirmed that at least two local samples had been
sent off to the Caribbean Epidemiology Centre (CAREC)
in Trinidad and Tobago to be tested for the virus
after an increased number of people with flu-like
symptoms began seeking medical attention. And over
in the Bahamas, 10 students and teachers who arrived
at the beginning of this week are under quarantine.
Getting a simple message out can be good medicine.
Personal hygiene precautions taken during any flu
season should be adopted by everyone. If serious flu
symptoms hit, it's important to seek medical attention
sooner.
US President Obama has urged schools with confirmed
or suspected cases to close temporarily.
What lies ahead now is a months-long process - or
longer - that Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano
yesterday likened to "a marathon, not a sprint."
That's why it's all the more important to avoid health
responses that rely on bad science or mask agendas.
Importation bans on pork products are steps the World
Health Organization says are not needed because the
virus can't be transmitted by eating pork.
However, while health authorities have said that
humans cannot be infected by eating pork or pork products,
Antigua and Barbuda and Suriname have banned the importation
of those items from Mexico and the United States.
Another unnecessary step would be to close borders
or clamp down on travel, acts that may have more to
do with anti-immigration sentiment than the job of
safeguarding the nation's health and peace of mind.
The news of the epidemic possibly reaching the Caribbean
came as the WHO raised the global alert level for
the swine flu virus to five, just one short of the
maximum. This means that there has been sustained
human to human transmission in at least two countries
and a pandemic is imminent.
So far, there have been no reported cases of swine
flu in the Federation and there is no need for the
public to panic, according to Chief Medical Officer
Dr. Patrick Martin.
At a press conference in St. Kitts Monday afternoon
Dr. Martin assured the public that systems had been
tested, personnel had been trained, and health officials
and those working at the ports of entry were ready.
Surveillance is in place at the ports, the
official ports, he told the press.
We urge prudence and caution at this trying time.
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