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H1N1 – Are we really doing enough?

Posted on 17 June 2009

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Epidemics know no borders. They know no race, no language or religion. The WHO has declared the H1N1 (Swine flu) as the first global pandemic in 41 years. As of 17:00 GMT, 15 June 2009, 76 countries have officially reported 35, 928 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 163 deaths.

In 2 weeks, India has moved from cautious to infected. The numbers continue to grow on a daily basis. For a disease that is highly contagious and with symptoms that could be easily mistaken for common ailments, the danger is omnipresent for a nation like ours – rich in people, average in medicare and poor in awareness. H1N1 knows no borders

Thankfully, India has finally raised a travel advisory yesterday. They have also requested for infected nations to screen air passengers at the source rather than just at the destination. The media is trying to bring in awareness to the masses and doctors and hospitals immediately refering suspect cases to the Govt. medicare centers.

Despite all this, a suspect escaped from a hospital quarantine a couple of days back. Officials were seen desperately trying to track down fellow passengers from flights that brougnt in confirmed cases to the country. Govt. centers are trying to arrange for adequate stocks of Tamiflu and Relenza. All this as research is now showing that H1N1 can further mutate to resist these drugs and yet hoping for a vaccine in then next 3 months.

As science tries to find a solution, and research better ways to counter the threat, we must acknowledge that no one  is beyond this danger. Thankfully H1N1 is still treatable and many nations are already prepared to (hopefully) contain it.

Prevention is better than cure. If you are interested to know more about H1N1, visit the WHO pages for:
- All about H1N1 and latest updates
- What each of us need to know about reducing risk of infection
- How we can help our our communities fight this dread

Spread the word! Awareness is the need of the day.

Image Courtesty: WHO

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This post was written by:

- who has written 35 posts on India Special.

Uttkarsh hails from the Indian IT hub of Hyderabad. He has several years of expertise leading teams on IT training, development and support. When he is not busy in office, he is cooking or photographing. He believes that God lives in each of us and that the best things in life are the simplest ones and they are free.

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1 Comments For This Post

  1. P K C Rajah says:

    Can we do better!?

    What have we done so far besides collecting data.
    Are the doctors aware (studied) about the cause and nature of this deadly disease?
    Are our R&D people on the job?
    Do we have appropriate vaccines or treatment systems, at least implementing the ones successfully adopted by other nations.

    However Uttkarsh has given us the food for thought!

    Thank you and warm regards

    Rajah

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