The automated voice on my answering machine at first sounded like a telemarketing call. Yet as my finger moved to the 'delete' button, I stopped. "THIS IS A TEST OF THE DISASTER HEALTHCARE VOLUNTEERS NOTIFICATION SYSTEM," the mechanical voice intoned. "This test has been initiated in conjunction with recent Public Health and medical activities in response to the Swine Flu."
"This is a big deal," I thought to myself. "They're preparing to mobilize."
As a practicing physician in San Francisco, I registered many years ago with the California Disaster Healthcare Volunteer (DHV) system. The last time I was contacted as a healthcare volunteer was more than a month after Hurricane Katrina. By the time the Federal government finally got around to putting out the call for volunteers, I was already on-site in New Orleans with a team of NRDC experts performing an environmental assessment and planning environmental monitoring in consultation with local officials and community representatives. The Feds moved too slowly to mobilize the public health response to Katrina; it seems that they are avoiding that mistake this time.
But is it necessary to create all this fuss? An emergency declaration after only a couple dozen cases of influenza seems like it might be overkill.
As I went to the DHV website to confirm my contact information and willingness to be deployed, I thought: "better to act too soon rather than too late."
We live in a time when scientists predict an unusual array of health crises.
In my opinion, we're already seeing many of these health crises beginning to emerge, and the Swine Flu cases so far are playing this script out exactly as predicted.
So what's the solution, other than staying home with your head under your pillow?
The solution is to have a U.S. public health system that is well-funded, well-run, and up to the job of protecting people. Unfortunately, over the past decade, the budgets for the U.S. public health system have been cut, so the government's ability to rapidly detect health threats, and quickly mobilize to respond, has been hampered. During the eight years of the Bush Administration, the federal government quietly eliminated or crippled more than a dozen essential monitoring programs. Budget cuts, restructuring, program termination, and removal of industry reporting requirements undermined or eliminated the information that alerts us to problems in our air, water, food, or communities. Programs that directly track human health were slashed, creating gaps in our information about infectious disease outbreaks, chemical exposures in people, and chronic disease. We predicted trouble in a report called "Deepest Cuts: Repairing Health Monitoring Programs Slashed Under the Bush Administration" released in December. Swine flu is a wake-up call: we have one of the best public health systems in the world, but it has been mismanaged and starved for resources for years.
Fortunately, the current administration seems to be aware of the problem. For example, the EPA has already moved to restore some monitoring requirements for toxic chemical hazards. This influenza outbreak reminds us of the need to focus on rebuilding the CDC. After all, CDC experts are at the forefront of the fight to protect us all from new and emerging health threats. So I'm hoping that Congress and the Administration act to increase the funding stream to CDC, so that they can build an even stronger health tracking network, and can prepare to respond rapidly and strongly to the crises of the 21st century, including emerging infectious diseases, and the health threats from climate change. It's not too late to get back on track.
This post originally appeared on NRDC's Switchboard blog.
Where is the voice of reason? Where is the person saying, "Hey, y'all, it's the FLU! It's not Super Mega Death Flu, it's NOT the return of the Plague, it's not Anthrax or SmallPox, it's the FLU and most likely you won't get it and if you do you'll be sick for a while but NOT DIE."
Instead of people missing work (when they can't afford to) because they are actually home sick with the flu, parents are going to miss work (when they can't afford to) because schools are shutting down left and right and they don't have access to childcare. This panic and paranoia is seriously making me angry about the state of the US. We constantly go 0 to 60 these days over every little thing.