首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Lessons from the 1918 Flu The last time a now influenza virus reached pandemic levels was in 1968, but the episode was not s
Lessons from the 1918 Flu The last time a now influenza virus reached pandemic levels was in 1968, but the episode was not s
admin
2010-01-10
36
问题
Lessons from the 1918 Flu
The last time a now influenza virus reached pandemic levels was in 1968, but the episode was not significantly deadlier than a typical had fin season. Few people who lived through it even knew it occurred. Still, it killed 34,000 Americans. The 1918 pandemic was far more lethal. It killed 675,000 Americans at a time when the U.S. population was 100 million. Fifty million to 100 million people purished worldwide in the 1918 pandemic, according to Nobel laureate F. Macfarlane Burnet. The flu killed more people in 24 weeks than AIDS has ’killed in 24 years. The difference in the death toll between 1918 and 1968 had little to do with such medical advances as antibiotics for secondary bacterial infections. The 1968 virus was simply much less virulent. But it wasn’t just the virus. As with Hurricane Katrina, some of the deaths in 1918 were the government’s responsibility. Surgeon General Rupert Blue was his day’s Mike Brown. Despite months of indications that the disease would erupt, Blue made no preparations. When the flu hit, he told the nation, "There is no cause for alarm."
Alarm was needed. Victims could die in 24 hours. Symptoms included bleeding from the nose, mouth, ears and eyes. Some people turned so dark blue from lack of oxygen that an Army physician noted that "it is hard to distinguish the coloured men from the white."
False reassurances from the government and newspapers added to the death rate. They also destroyed trust in authority, as Americans quickly realized they were being lied to. The result: society began to break apart. Confidential Red Cross reports noted "panic akin to the terror of the Middle Ages of the plague" and victims starving to death "not from lack of food but because the well are afraid to help the sick." Doctors and nurses were kidnapped. One scientist concluded that if the epidemic continued to build, "civilization could easily disappear from the face of the earth within a few more weeks."
What will happen during the next pandemic.’? No one can predict, but even a virus as mild as the 1968 strain would kill many tens of thousands in the U.S. alone. Since 1968, demographic changes have made influenza a greater, not a lesser, threat. Our population now includes more elderly and more people with a weakened immune system. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that influenza kills 36,000 Americans in an average year. The CDC also calculates that a pandemic caused by a virus comparable to that of 1968 would kill between 89,000 and 207,000 Americans. And the scientist who prepared that study has refused to estimate the toll from a more virulent virus because, he says, he doesn’t want to "scare" people.
Even the mildest virus would slam the economy harder now than at any time in the past. That’s be- cause businesses—and hospitals—have improved efficiency to minimize slack. When absenteeism pre- vents one plant from shipping a part, or when a surge of patients overwhelms a hospital already under- staffed because of sickness, massive disruptions result.
How prepared are we for all that? Net very. To its credit, this Administration has struggled to get a- head of the curve. Former Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson considered influet.za among his highest priorities. In his last speech as Secretary, he called it his gravest concern. Under him, funding for influenza increased 1,000% despite opposition from House Republicans, who took the threat seriously only after last year’s vaccine debacle, when almost half the nation’s supply became unavailable because of contamination.
That problem highlighted a weakness in the vaccine-production infrastructure, which, as publichealth expert Michael Osterholm says, "is our levee system against a catastrophic .event," But even in a perfect world, virtually no vaccine would be available for the first six months of a pandemic. And the Ad- ministration has left huge holes in our preparedness. After years of delays, a pandemic plan still needs to be finished.
Yet the dearest lesson from Katrina is that plans are not enough. They must be put into practice. Preparation matters. Even in the chaos of 1918, people who knew what to expect and had been trained did their duty, often in heroic fashion. San Francisco was the only major city in which the local leader- ship told the truth about the disease. It organized emergency hospitals, volunteer ambulance drivers, soup kitchens and the like in advance. There, although fear certainly showed itself, it did not paralyze, ff we prepare well enough, we won’t need heroes; we’ll just need people doing their jobs.
Symptoms included bleeding from the nose, mouth, ears and eyes.
选项
A、Y
B、N
C、NG
答案
A
解析
本句是第二段第二句
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/IGt7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
BeforeWorldWarII,blacksintheNorthlivedinghettos,becausetheycouldnotaffordhousesoutsidethisarea.DuringtheW
Oneofthemostimportantfeaturesthatdistinguishesreadingfromlisteningisthenatureoftheaudience.【B1】thewriteroften
A、Changeherclassschedule.B、Filloutajobapplication.C、Organizetapesontheshelves.D、WorkontheFrenchlessons.BWhat
PaulT.Rankinfoundthattheaverageindividualspentmostofhiswakingtimeeitherreading,writing,speakingorlistening.
PaulT.Rankinfoundthattheaverageindividualspentmostofhiswakingtimeeitherreading,writing,speakingorlistening.
A、Theyusemanydifferentmethods.B、Allbirdsfollowmajorgeographicalfeatures.C、Allbirdsusetheirmemoryofamap.D、Weh
A、Sheseldomreadsbooksfromcovertocover.B、Sheisinterestedinreadingnovels.C、Shereadonlypartofthebook.D、Shewas
Almostallcompaniestryingtodevelopnewproductsandcreatenewjobshaveto______.Alltheessentialservicesonwhichwe
Iamnotinfavorof______(母亲卖掉老房子).
Thereisnoevidencethatchildrenreceive____________(从外在工作的母亲那里获得的关注少于)frommothersworkinginsidethehome.
随机试题
A.浸润型肺结核B.血行播散型肺结核C.原发型肺结核D.慢性纤维空洞型肺结核E.支气管结核下列肺结核的类型划分应是:男性,30岁。因发热、咳嗽2周就诊,胸透为右上肺炎,抗生素治疗已2周无效。昨起少量咯血
职权指的是()。
背景某机电安装公司承担了某钢厂冷轧薄板连续退火炉工程的施工总承包任务。工程内容包括:冷轧薄板连续退火炉本体及附属设备、工艺管道安装;退火炉钢结构厂房建造安装;厂外燃气、原料系统管道安装施工。合同规定,项目的质量目标为获得国家安装
()是一种将贷款本金分段偿还,根据资金的实际占用时间计算利息的还款方式。
广义的贷款法律关系包括()。
下列对因工致残职工劳动关系的处理中,不符合法律规定的是()。
由数据结构、关系操作集合和完整性约束三部分组成了()。
根据国务院印发的《“十三五”控制温室气体排放工作方案》,下列哪些是其中提到的“十三五”控制温室气体排放的重点任务?①低碳引领能源革命②推动城镇化低碳发展③强化基础能力支撑④建设和运行全国碳排放权交易市场⑤加强地区监控
Thelivelihoodofeachspeciesinthevastandintricateassemblageoflivingthingsdependsontheexistencesofotherorganism
AIDSThediseaseAIDShasbecometheleadingcauseofdeathamongyoungadultsinAmerica.MuchrecentAmericanculturedeal
最新回复
(
0
)