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#1 User is offline   Goat Boy© Icon

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Posted 07 November 2009 - 06:04 AM

It's about time...

http://www.cbc.ca/he...h1n1-media.html

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H1N1 overplayed by media, public health: MDs

Public health officials and journalists have overstated the importance of the swine flu, a former Ontario chief medical officer of health says.

Dr. Richard Schabas, chief medical officer of health for Hastings and Prince Edward Counties in eastern Ontario, said the H1N1 influenza outbreak needs to be put into proper perspective.

About 200,000 people die in Canada every year from all causes combined, including about 4,000 from seasonal flu.

"By the time all the dust has settled on H1N1, somewhere between 200 and 300 people will have died in this country," Schabas said Thursday during a panel on media coverage of H1N1 on CBC-TV's The National.

Schabas criticized the media for not trying to put the story into perspective, and for being "a little too easy to spin sometimes" by public health officials.

"I'm not letting the media off the hook totally, but I think the real villains of the piece here have been those public health officials who have consistently overplayed and overstated the importance of what is happening," he said.

"By the time all is said and done, this is not a major public health event, but you'd never know that from what some people are saying."


13-year-old's death
The panel also looked at the front-page coverage given to the death of Evan Frustaglio, a 13-year-old hockey player from Toronto. Evan died on the eve of the H1N1 vaccine becoming available, and demand for the vaccine jumped overnight, catching health officials by surprise.

"It was very clear when we were reporting the lines that most of the people in there did say, 'We came because we saw the story about that little boy,' " CBC reporter Ioanna Roumeliotis said.

Evan's death and his grieving father's plea to parents to consider vaccinating their children was a tremendous human interest story, agreed Dr. Allison McGeer, an infectious disease specialist at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital.

But "I'm quite sure that the people who were reporting that didn't necessarily think about what the consequences of that would be or the context that was in," McGeer said. "What we saw afterwards was that it caused an enormous amount of fear and anxiety that we would all like not to have seen."

A healthy child in Canada is about 20 times more likely to be killed by a car than by the H1N1 virus, Schabas said, but that isn't going to make the national news.

"Children actually die of flu every year and a few more die of H1N1. This was not unexpected, and the way it was presented — as if this was a sudden bolt out of the blue, some change in our perspective of H1N1 — that's what created the anxiety. It was the way it was presented."



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#2 User is offline   Glasgogirl Icon

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Posted 07 November 2009 - 09:25 AM

Oh & so much to worry about... this flu, & that flu... here's the thing....

3years ago, it was the Chinese year of the cow, & we get mad cow disease.... two years ago, the year of the bird, guess what? Avian flu... this year, the year of the Pig... yep, swine flu. Next year is the year of the cock.... anyone else worried? :tongue:
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#3 User is offline   Goat Boy© Icon

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Posted 07 November 2009 - 09:37 AM

View PostGlasgogirl, on 07 November 2009 - 09:25 AM, said:

Oh & so much to worry about... this flu, & that flu... here's the thing....

3years ago, it was the Chinese year of the cow, & we get mad cow disease.... two years ago, the year of the bird, guess what? Avian flu... this year, the year of the Pig... yep, swine flu. Next year is the year of the cock.... anyone else worried? :tongue:


LOL. I just heard that today.

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#4 User is offline   DocWatson Icon

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Posted 07 November 2009 - 09:54 AM

The media didn't reckon on the public's reaction this swiftly. It's taken them by surprise the amount of information they have out there. The media were caught with their panities down. Joe Peep was smarter than they thought. Now they are saying there's too much hype..the very media that's driven it all along/with the WHO & Margaret Chan!!!!...

LOL, That's rich!
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#5 User is offline   DocWatson Icon

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Posted 07 November 2009 - 09:56 AM

View PostGlasgogirl, on 07 November 2009 - 09:25 AM, said:

Oh & so much to worry about... this flu, & that flu... here's the thing....

3years ago, it was the Chinese year of the cow, & we get mad cow disease.... two years ago, the year of the bird, guess what? Avian flu... this year, the year of the Pig... yep, swine flu. Next year is the year of the cock.... anyone else worried? Posted Image



ha ha ha ha
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#6 User is offline   dwirn Icon

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Posted 07 November 2009 - 10:37 AM

View PostDocWatson, on 07 November 2009 - 09:54 AM, said:

The media didn't reckon on the public's reaction this swiftly. It's taken them by surprise the amount of information they have out there. The media were caught with their panities down. Joe Peep was smarter than they thought. Now they are saying there's too much hype..the very media that's driven it all along/with the WHO & Margaret Chan!!!!...

LOL, That's rich!



Yeah your information about Doctor Margaret Chan is based on your nutbar racist Dickhead Watson. You continuous promote your racist nutbar Jesuit/Chinese/Rothschild conspiracy theory that no one in their right mind believes in. Of course, Dickhead Watson ignores that fact that Doctor Margaret Chan got her medical degree from Canada, and she was awarded the the Order of British Empire from Queen Elizabeth II for her medical work.


Yeah right, the media hype is increasing the use of ICU. There are more people going to ICU for H1N1 problems. This is much more than any seasonal flu.


ICU admissions up for flu-related illness
Last Updated: Thursday, November 5, 2009 | 10:26 PM ET

Flu activity is three times higher this week than last week, Canada's chief public health officer said Thursday.

The higher activity is based on admissions to hospitals and intensive care units, as well as the number of regions reporting widespread flu, Dr. David Butler-Jones told a news conference in Ottawa.

"We expect to hear of more illness and deaths in the coming weeks as we go further into the second wave," Butler-Jones said Thursday.

The key measure is ICU admissions, he said.
http://www.cbc.ca/he...1n1-canada.html

Critically Ill Swine Flu Patients Spend Weeks in Intensive Care
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By Jason Gale

Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Swine flu sufferers who developed life-threatening complications during the pandemic’s initial wave in Ireland occupied intensive-care beds for weeks, pointing to a potential area of strain from any winter surge in cases.

Nineteen patients with the new H1N1 virus admitted to intensive care units from April 28 to Oct. 3 stayed an average of 25 days, Irish health officials said in a study yesterday. More than half were still in ICU on Oct. 13, when the study was being prepared, marking one patient’s 62nd day of critical care.

The findings show how H1N1 is stretching medical services even as the majority of patients recover within days and the number of deaths has so far been a fraction of the seasonal-flu toll. In Australia and New Zealand, where epidemics peaked in July and August, the virus drove a 15-fold increase in intensive care admissions for viral lung inflammation, especially among pregnant women, the obese and people with chronic lung disease.

“Some patients have an extremely protracted ICU stay, with a number of current patients in ICU in excess of 60 days,” wrote Jennifer Martin, a doctor with the Health Protection Surveillance Centre in Dublin, and colleagues in the study, which was published in the journal Eurosurveillance.

From late April to early October, 205 confirmed H1N1 patients were hospitalized in Ireland, with 9 percent admitted to an intensive-care unit, the authors said. Four of the hospitalized patients died.

Chronic respiratory disease was the most common risk factor in ICU admissions, followed by chronic neurological disease, asthma and severe obesity, they said.

Long stays in ICU may reflect a lack in smaller hospitals of so-called high-dependency units, or HDUs, where patients who no longer require intensive care are monitored more closely than in regular wards, the authors said.

“This will impact on ICU and HDU resources as the pandemic progresses,” they said.
http://www.bloomberg...id=aYB46_tucEGo

This post has been edited by dwirn: 07 November 2009 - 10:38 AM

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