1 year after swine flu, Mexicans split on response
But after swine flu proved far less lethal than feared, opinion has divided on whether the epidemic was a valuable test-run that left the world better prepared to handle a more lethal avian flu pandemic, or an episode that left the public jaded and weary.
Mexicans are bristling after following initial government recommendations that may have been counterproductive, and question the value of late-arriving vaccines.
But the director of Mexico’s National Center for Epidemiology and Disease Control insists the nation — and the world — are better prepared for another, more deadly flu outbreak.
"We as a global community have been very lucky to have this opportunity to do this massive test, practice-run, with a virus," Miguel Angel Lezana said.
He says a deadly flu is coming sooner or later: "We have to be prepared for it."
Within five days of last year’s April 23 flu announcement, Mexico City would essentially shut down, streets empty of traffic and almost every business shuttered by government order. Only a few wary, masked silhouettes plied the streets, and a pall of fear and mistrust settled over the city.
One year later, the fear is gone but Mexico still is feeling the human and economic consequences of swine flu.
The pandemic killed 1,185 people in Mexico — out of 17,700 deaths worldwide. Tourism revenues, Mexico’s largest source of income after oil and remittances, have yet to recover to pre-flu levels.
Lezana estimates that about half of Mexico’s 107 million people have immunity to the virus, either through the vaccine or contracting a mild case of swine flu, giving the country a "herd immunity" that would slow the transmission chain of the H1N1 virus.
But Mexico, like many other nations, is still struggling to give out increasingly unpopular vaccines. About three-quarters of the way to fulfilling the nation’s goal of 30 million vaccinations, many here wonder why they should risk the shot’s real or imagined side effects at this point.
Carla Gonzalez, a 25 year-old homemaker, says she feels misled by the whole government response.
A flu vaccine, she says, made her sick. And she wonders if the whole emergency wasn’t concocted to get people’s minds off Mexico’s economic and social problems, echoing accusations — mainly from the political left — that the crisis was overblown.
"I won’t ever get vaccinated again," Gonzalez said. "We still don’t know if this was something real, or something that the authorities manipulated, a deception."
The World Health Organization estimates only 1 in 10,000 people have significant reactions to the vaccine.
The swine flu outbreak persuaded Mexico to develop the capacity to make its own flu vaccines after it had trouble buying enough.
Mexico has slowly acquired the vaccine — even as other nations sell or destroying stocks — to vaccinate about 23 million people so far, even setting up inoculation stands in the Mexico City subway.
One lesson of the epidemic is that information, true or not, flows more quickly on the Internet than through official channels.
Mexico City Health Secretary Dr. Armando Ahued acknowledges that the city’s vaccination program was affected "by rumors that began to appear on the Internet that the vaccine was bad ... and that sparked a huge fear in the public."
Another unfortunate lesson: Publicly reporting the swine flu outbreak, and energetically pursuing measures to contain it, wound up costing Mexico about 0.3 percent of its $1 trillion GDP, largely in lost tourism income. Tourism has since started to recover, but Mexican officials say some sort of international fund to compensate countries for early reporting of new outbreaks is needed.
If not, "the next time, countries are going to say, ’no, this is going to affect our economy, it’s better not to say anything,’" Ahued said.
Recalling the first days of the epidemic when hospitals were filling up with people on respirators, he said the public-health message — avoid infection, and seek treatment early — has percolated into the general population.
It often shows in small ways.
"Now, when you go to a restaurant or some other public place, almost all of them are giving out gel. When the waiter assigns you your table, they offer gel, or there is a bottle of gel at the door," Ahued notes. "There is an improvement in culture and education."
Franciso Santos, 28, followed the government’s instructions but now feels deceived. He wore a disposable surgical mask to work as a systems engineer every day at the height of the outbreak, but such masks have since been found to be useless in protecting uninfected people, and may even expose them to greater risk.
Guadalupe Soto Estrada, an epidemiologist at the National University’s Department of Public Health, explained that using disposable masks "is sometimes worse, because people take them off and on and touch them, so it is likely the micro-organisms on the mask will be passed onto whatever surface they come in contact with."
Authorities now only recommend masks for infected people, who should probably avoid going out in public anyway.
"I hope next time they (authorities) act with more information and more caution," Santos said. "They alarmed people. ... There was a lot of economic and psychological damage."
Ultimately, Mexico, like most countries, probably will never be able to build enough hospitals to deal with a highly lethal and contagious flu. But in 2009, authorities discovered the answer was to stop people from flooding into hospitals — and potentially collapsing the health care system — by instructing primary-care physicians to give anti-viral medication to anyone who showed multiple flu symptoms, even before any tests were run on them.
The World Health Organization says the virus has now spread to 213 countries, virtually every corner of the globe — proving the disease could not be contained even by banning flights or product imports from Mexico, or quarantining travelers who had passed through here, something several countries did early in the 2009 pandemic. The disease spread anyway.
"This is something we really do not want to see done the next time there is this type of pandemic," Lezana says.
Incident
Another Azerbaijani died in Ukraine
Azerbaijan detects contraband worth AZN 4.8 mln at border last month - PHOTO
Fuel tanker truck and locomotive collusion in Azerbaijan leaves one injured -PHOTO-VIDEO
Appeal hearing on complaints filed by Armenian citizens continues
NEWS FEED
Venezuela earthquake death toll rises to 2,595
Trump: US has achieved almost all of its goals in negotiations with Iran
Spain defeats Austria in its first World Cup playoff victory in 16 years
Monaco blast probably perpetrated by Ukrainian woman residing in Germany
US offers Iran access to frozen funds for free Hormuz Strait passage
Rutte: Europe and Canada will increase their defense spending by $250 billion in two years
Death toll from Russia's massive strikes on Kyiv rises to 25 - PHOTO - UPDATED 5
Serbia may hold both presidential and parliamentary elections in the fall
Blast at Damascus cafe leaves seven dead, others wounded-UPDATED-2
Another Azerbaijani died in Ukraine
President of European Commission shared video on her visit to Azerbaijan and Armenia
Earthquake jolts Armenia
Belarus urges its citizens to avoid traveling to Russia's border regions
The SBU reported exposing 11 people who, on the order of the Russian Federation, organized anti-Ukrainian rallies in Poland
Sahiba Gafarova, Shahin Mustafayev and other Azerbaijani officials to attend Khamenei's funeral
Pashinyan on Kocharyan: They will all be arrested
Russia to send 14 wagons of wheat to Armenia via Azerbaijan
Zelenskyy: Russia will face a response for its latest attack on Kyiv
Armenia to restore railway lines to Nakhchivan and Türkiye
Mojtaba Khamenei won't attend father's funeral: Iran Supreme Leader's aide
Pashinyan: Armenia does not plan to unilaterally terminate railway management deal with Russia
DRC exceeds 1,400 cases of Ebola in the latest outbreak and already nears 440 deaths
Pashinyan: Work underway to open highway from Azerbaijan border to Türkiye for international freight transport
FM Bayramov meets with the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy for Road Safety
President of Uzbekistan arrives on state visit to Georgia
Türkiye and Azerbaijan discuss electricity transmission opportunities
Commander of Azerbaijan Air Force on official visit to Türkiye
Azerbaijan and Türkiye discuss military cooperation
Pashinyan: EU introduces tariff-free regime for a number of products exported from Armenia
Lebanon, Syria sign agreement to establish joint higher committee
German defense minister says Ukraine conflict enters 'decisive phase'
Trump: The U.S. spends more on NATO than anyone else but gets nothing in return
Iran warns US, Israel against attacks ahead of funeral processions for Khamenei
Hamas says it executed a man who collaborated with Israel
Al Arabiya: Next round of indirect US-Iran talks to be held on July 18
BTC operatorship transferred to SOCAR
Turkish National Defense University delegation discusses advancement of cooperation in military education
Baku Olympic Stadium lit up in U.S. flag colors ahead of Independence Day
Drone threat declared in Moscow region
Magnitude 5.3 earthquake strikes the Mediterranean Sea
Eight Thai monks killed after 11-year-old drives truck into procession
Iran warns oil tankers to use approved routes in Strait of Hormuz or face a ‘forceful response’
Pashinyan: Expanding energy cooperation with Türkiye and Azerbaijan is important
Greek ruling party calls for protests after firebomb kills candidate's mother
Armenia parliament speaker Alen Simonyan to not take mandate, not be in new legislature
Pashinyan: Yerevan will continue dialogue with Moscow and its course toward EU integration
Türkiye presents Turkic World Civil Society Support System project - PHOTO
Poland detains two men suspected of spying for Belarus
Leyla Aliyeva attends opening of regional branch of Stray Animal Care Center in Yevlakh - PHOTO
Kremlin: Gerasimov reports results of massive strikes on military targets in Kyiv to Putin