Title: Caught Unawares
1Caught Unawares
- The risk of being unprepared
- to listen
Joan Deppa, Ph.D., Associate professor S.I.
Newhouse School of Public Communications Syracuse
University, Syracuse NY 13244-2100 Jadeppa_at_syr.edu
July 13, 2005 Upstate NY SRA Symposium The
Syracuse Technology Garden
2Crises
3Common themes
- Warnings and/or early signs of risk
- Delay and/or denial by authorities
- Actions by ordinary people, some heroic
4SARS first pandemic of 21st c.
- Spread to 29 countries
- Caused about 8,000 cases
- Led to 774 deaths
- Most cases and all deaths were adults
- 50 of victims were infected in hospitals
- 21 of victims were healthcare workers
5Guangzhou, China
- November 23, 2002
- WHO officials receive clues that an unusual
respiratory disease is emerging in Guangdong
province. Dr. Klaus Stohr, head of the WHO
influenza team, later recalls how a health
official from the province spoke about a highly
infectious respiratory disease that was causing
deaths and making health care workers sick as
well. - Canadian Broadcasting Corp.
6GPHIN translates a headline
- The Global Public Health Intelligence Network
(GPHIN), developed by Health Canada in
collaboration with WHO, is a secure
Internet-based multilingual early-warning tool
that continuously searches global media sources
such as news wires and web sites to identify
information about disease outbreaks and other
events of potential international public health
concern. GPHIN is one of the most important
sources of informal information related to
outbreaks. More than 60 of the initial outbreak
reports come from unofficial informal sources,
including sources other than the electronic
media, which require verification.
7GPHIN translates a headline
- The link provided led to this Website.
8(Later, the CBC will translate)
9Guangzhou, China
- January 3, 2003
- The daily newspaper for Heyuan City reports that
two people had been diagnosed with atypical
pneumonia on December 15. - It says people in the city have begun to crazily
purchase antibiotics because of rumors about the
spreading of an unknown virus. - The reporter checks with the citys Center for
Disease Control and is reassured that there is no
unknown virus .
10Guangzhou, China
- January 5, 2003
- Two days later a reporter for the New Express in
Guangzhou follows up by interviewing Dr. Yilong
Wu, head of the No. 3 hospital of Zongshan
University, who says that atypical pneumonia is
not infectious.
11Toronto Vancouver, Canada
- January 2003
- Chinese-language newspapers in Canada carry
stories about the strange respiratory disease in
China. - Pharmacists in Vancouver report customers buying
surgical masks to send to family members
overseas.
12Toronto Vancouver, Canada
- January 2003
- Toronto's Sing Tao newspaper asks What's to
stop that epidemic from coming to Canada on a
plane?
13Guangzhou, China
- Unpublished WHO data a second wave of disease
with amplified transmission to health workers
began occurring during the first 10 days of
February - David Heymann
- World Health Organization
14ProMED-mail A free, early alert, global
electronic surveillance system for the detection
and communication of outbreaks.
- Date 10 Feb 2003
- From Stephen O. Cunnion, MD, PhD, MPH
International Consultants in Health, Inc. Member
ASTMH, ISTM - This morning I received this e-mail and then
searched your archives and found nothing that
pertained to it. Does anyone know anything about
this problem? Have you heard of an epidemic in
Guangzhou? - An acquaintance of mine from a teacher's chat
room lives there and reports that the hospitals
there have been closed and people are dying. - Two other people contacted ProMED that same day
with similar news. Six subsequent e-mail posts
detailed the Guangdong Province, China,
pneumonia outbreak.
15Guangzhou, China
- THE AP (and others) REPORT
- Travelers wearing masks wait outside a train
station in Guangzhou, southern China, Tuesday,
Feb. 11, 2003 after a virus outbreak. An
unidentified pneumonia virus has killed five
people and left hundreds hospitalized in southern
China while rumors of a surging death toll
prompted frightened residents to stock up on
antibiotics. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)
16Guangzhou, China
- NEW CHINA NEWS AGENCY
- Guangzhou, 11 February
- The municipal people's government of Guangzhou
says an outbreak of atypical pneumonia in the
city in southern China is now under control. - Monitored by the BBC
17Guangzhou to Hong Kong
- Feb. 15, 2003 A man, known as patient A, from
Guangdong province develops symptoms of SARS. He
travels to Hong Kong to visit family. - Feb. 21, 2003 Patient A checks into a hotel. He
infects 12 other people in the same hotel.
Investigators say these patients in turn spread
the illness to others in Hong Kong, Vietnam,
Singapore, Ireland, Germany and Canada. - Feb. 22 Patient A is hospitalized in Hong Kong.
He dies the next day. Four hospital workers and
two of his family members become ill. One family
member dies. - NPR
18Hong Kong to Canada
- March 5, 2003 A 78-year-old woman who had
traveled to Hong Kong in February dies in
Toronto. - Initially, her death is blamed on cardiac arrest.
- NPR
19Toronto, Canada
- March 7, 2003
- The womans son, Chi Kwai Tse, 44, arrives at
Scarborough Grace Hospital emergency room with
severe symptoms. Doctors are stumped. - Nurse Agnes Wong remembers something she read in
a Chinese paper. "I read another story about a
young family in Hong Kong. They took a trip back
to Mainland China and then the father got sick,
the daughter got sick and then eventually at the
end of the trip two family members died. So that
is really sad and very unusual. That stayed with
me." - Canadian Broadcasting Corp.
20Toronto, Canada
- Agnes Wong wonders if this case was caused by the
same agent. She calls the night nurse at
Scarborough Hospital and asks her to check
whether anyone in the family had traveled to Hong
Kong or China. - When the night nurse calls back, she says the
patients mother had traveled to Hong Kong and
come back ill. - So I told them to notify the physician. It's
just somehow I made the connection, maybe it's a
nursing instinct. Maybe it's sixth sense. - Canadian Broadcasting Corp.
21(No Transcript)
22Toronto, Canada
- Health Update
- SARS Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
- On March 14, 2003, the Ontario Ministry of Health
and Long-Term Care alerted health care providers
about four cases of atypical pneumonia resulting
in two deaths within a single family in Toronto.
These cases provided an epidemiological link to
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in
Ontario..
23(No Transcript)
24GPHIN II, November 17,2004
- Ted Turner and Sam Nunn through the Nuclear
Threat Initiative finance expansion of the
program - The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports
- The new network will search for reports of
diseases and other health hazards in six
languages --- English, French, Russian, Arabic,
Spanish and Chinese --- instead of just English
and French as it did before. And it will do it
around the clock, alerting health officials to
unusual health-related events from Mongolia to
Madagascar.
25China in denial over foot and mouth cull Attempt
to hide slaughter echoes response to bird flu and
Sars
- By Jonathan Watts in Dabailou village
- Tuesday May 24, 2005 Guardian
- In the idyllic setting of the Beijing countryside
a short drive north of the Great Wall, a secret
slaughter is taking place. - Hundreds, possibly thousands, of cows have been
killed in Dabailou village since the start of the
month in a frantic attempt to stem one of China's
worst foot and mouth disease scares.But instead
of warning the nation's farmers and turning the
village into a quarantine area, the authorities
have mounted a botched attempt to cover up the
news.
26Flu in wild birds sparks fears of mutating
virusExperts pressure China for samples that
can be analysed. Nature 435, (2 June 2005)
- The deaths in China of more than 1,000 migratory
birds from the flu strain H5N1 has left experts
struggling to square the outbreak with their
knowledge of the virus. At the same time, rumours
are beginning to circulate that humans in the
region have also fallen victim to the disease ?
although official sources have so far denied this.
27Flu in wild birds sparks fears of mutating
virusExperts pressure China for samples that
can be analysed. Nature 435, (2 June 2005)
- The H5N1 strain has killed at least 53 people in
Asia since late 2003, and is seen as one of the
prime candidates for sparking a human pandemic.
Migratory birds can act as carriers of flu, but
their role in spreading highly dangerous strains
such as H5N1 remains a matter for debate. - Until the latest outbreak, only a handful of
migratory birds were known to have died from
H5N1. This led some experts to suggest that the
migrants are asymptomatic carriers of the virus,
causing the occasional outbreak among poultry
populations along their migration routes.
28Crises