"Hysteria, Thy Name is SARS"

From: matus@matus1976.com
Date: Mon May 12 2003 - 13:14:45 MDT

  • Next message: Michael M. Butler: "Re: Bioweapons smoking gun"

    A more recent skeptical look at SARS by columnist Michael Fumento.

    - Michael Dickey

    Hysteria, Thy Name is SARS

    from - http://www.fumento.com/disease/nrosars.html

    By Michael Fumento
    National Review Online, May 7, 2003
    Copyright 2003 National Review Online

    The media need a chill pill.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    ----
    The truth about SARS is that this image should never have been on Time's
    cover, nor that of Newsweek and U.S News & World Report.
    Last week's covers of U.S. News & World Report, Time, and Newsweek were
    virtually identical: A terrified person wearing a medical mask emblazoned
    "SARS." The April 29 New Zealand Herald headlined: "SARS Surge Could Stretch
    NZ Says Annette King." Total confirmed New Zealand cases: one. "SARS could
    eventually kill millions," blared the New Scientist wire service, with no
    hint as to how this might happen. SARS "now threatens to plunge the world
    economy into freefall," declared the London Observer. The New York Times has
    printed over 330 articles mentioning the disease in the last 30 days, while
    even the staid Wall Street Journal published ten SARS articles on a single
    day.
    University of Toronto Medical historian Edward Shorter calls SARS reaction
    "A media-fanned wave of mass hysteria," and "mass psychosis." But is he
    overstating the case?
    According to the World Health Organization (WHO) as of May 6, 6727 cases of
    SARS have been reported since mid-November with 478 deaths. In what at a
    glance seems one of the few slight concessions to reality Slate reported:
    "SARS is not quite as contagious as the flu." But that's a slight
    understatement. Flu causes between "three and five million cases of severe
    illness and between 250,000 and 500,000 deaths" per year, according to the
    WHO – far more serious illness and death in a single day than SARS has
    caused in 21 weeks. Far more Americans die of influenza each year during flu
    season (about 36,000) than have yet been killed by SARS globally. Yet few
    Americans would die of flu if only they were worried enough to roll up their
    sleeves for a $15 (or often free) vaccination
    SARS is repeatedly referred to as "killer pneumonia," as if pneumonia
    normally causes just hiccups. Yet 62,000 Americans died of pneumonia in
    2001. The media are fascinated by the possibility that this virus came to us
    from animals, displaying incredible ignorance that so does the flu. SARS
    stories often invoke the great flu pandemic of 1918-1919, which probably
    killed 40 million people according to WHO estimates. That's more than ten
    times as many people daily – among a global population a third of today's –
    as SARS has yet killed.
    Even today, malaria and tuberculosis – which like SARS are both essentially
    localized and yet global – kill perhaps 15,000 people daily.
    A far better name for the disease would be "The China Syndrome." Ninety
    percent of all SARS cases are concentrated in China (including Hong Kong),
    up from 82 percent on April 1. Of the 153 new cases reported May 6, only six
    were outside China. Only about 15 percent of the world's nations have
    reported even one SARS case.
    Why China? Hong Kong's medical care system has gone to pieces since the
    communists took over, and China's hygiene is as bad as its health care. The
    last time my wife and I went to Shanghai for a week we got our shots and
    avoided the water, yet as soon as we got back we had three emergency room
    trips between us.
    Between them, malaria and TB kill more people in an hour than the world has
    lost thus far to SARS.
    Is Asia in general a SARS hotbed?
    The April 26 Los Angeles Times reported, "SARS continued to spread across
    Asia on Friday," and a Bangkok-based paper reported on April 19, "The SARS
    virus has now hit nearly every country in Asia, spreading fear, panic, and
    economic chaos in its wake." Yet more than half of East Asian and Southeast
    Asian nations report no SARS cases.
    Japan was last reported with two cases and no deaths, while India is listed
    as having one case and no deaths.
    How contagious is the disease in countries with good hygiene and health
    care?
    On April 1, Europe had 21 SARS cases; on May 6 it had 36. Only one of these
    was transmitted locally, with the other patients infected in Asia. Indeed,
    of the 29 countries outside of China reporting SARS cases, merely four have
    reported local transmission. Moreover, the WHO now says that aside from
    China the worldwide infection rate is decreasing. For example, Vietnam has a
    relatively high number of cases, 63, but hasn't reported a new one since
    April 14.
    How lethal is SARS?
    Globally, it's about seven percent, in the same league as other forms of
    pneumonia. This is notwithstanding the May 1 Washington Post reporting that
    WHO official Mark Salter said it was 10 percent. A CNN.com article that day
    was titled: "SARS Death Rate Rising," but it had Salter saying it "could
    likely reach 10 percent." "Could" and "is" are not the same.
    CNN paraphrased Salter's explanation that "the disease is still in its early
    stages" and "it was normal for death rates to increase in such
    circumstances." But the opposite is true. With relatively unknown illnesses,
    death rates tend to drop as hospitals become more adept at treating
    symptoms. Is it coincidence that while the death rate is about seven percent
    in China, there have been no fatalities from 101 cases in Europe and the
    U.S? Not that this stopped the Post from reporting, "Surprisingly, the
    highest death rates appear to be occurring in the most advanced parts of the
    world." Surprising, indeed!
    Canada is admittedly a strange exception to the rule, yet there as
    everywhere the disease is gnat on an elephant's butt compared to flu, and
    Canada has reported only six new cases in the past ten days. This may also
    rightly put the last nail in the coffin of the idea that Canada has a
    wonderful health care system that the U.S. should emulate.
    Could the virus mutate to become more lethal? Usually it's the other way
    around, as natural selection favors strains that are less lethal and thus
    likelier to survive indefinitely in the host.
    Even in Asia, most countries have reported no SARS cases.
    Yet much of the talk of economic gloom and doom may well be true, if only
    because perception prevails over reality. Airline industries around the
    world have been struck yet another powerful blow, as has the entire travel
    and tourism industry and the Asian manufacturing sector.
    The World Bank revised its East Asian growth downward by almost ten percent,
    in part due to the SARS impact on tourism and other face-to-face sectors
    such as business travel, transportation and retail. Stock markets are being
    slammed, with Hong Kong plummeting to their lowest levels in four years. The
    SARS outbreak could cost Canada's economy up to $2.1 billion in lost growth
    this year, according to a major Toronto bank forecast.
    Nor is it just markets; human beings are feeling the impact right now.
    Persons of Chinese origin are being discriminated against in various
    countries, with Chinatowns becoming ghost towns. "The impact could be
    devastating" for Asian migrant workers, according to a top U.N. demographer.
    A foreign tourist was held in involuntary quarantine in New York City for
    virtually his ten-day vacation because he had a fever and ubiquitous
    "flu-like symptoms," while U.C. Berkeley has barred summer session students
    from China and other regions of Asia with relatively high numbers of SARS
    cases. Would they do so for the far-more-contagious and equally lethal flu?
    A bit of fear can be useful in controlling an epidemic. But that applies to
    rational fear, not hysteria. Did people's refusal to sit near AIDS patients
    slow that epidemic? Will refusing to sit next to a Canadian of Asian descent
    slow the spread of SARS?
    This global hysteria has no upside. As Shorter says, even as it appears in
    most places the disease is being contained, "What hasn't been contained is
    the mass psychosis surrounding it. It's entirely the working of the media;
    this need never have happened." In fairness though, public health officials
    have also contributed.
    Roosevelt's assertion in 1933 "that the only thing we have to fear is fear
    itself" was certainly an overgeneralization; but it has never been more
    applicable than during the SARS hysteria.
    


    This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Mon May 12 2003 - 13:10:46 MDT