Don't get too Excited Until you read the article!!
I will be commenting at the end on what I have hinted about above - but I want YOU TO READ IT FIRST!!
I can't believe this article is spun the way it is! There is So much I could say about this article - but I will let you make your own opinion on it! OH - I will comment on an OUTRIGHT Lie in the article. It says - there is NO comparisons to past years of deaths to the flu - to what is going on now. Well - someone needs to direct them to a few simple clicks to the Ukraine Health Ministers Website page and ALL the Past years comparisons and averages of deaths, illness etc is there for the World to See! I have looked at them myself. Considering I am not a reporter and it was not hard for me to find - how could that statement be made!!??
Article:
KIEV — From Monday's Globe and Mail Published on Monday, Nov. 09, 2009 12:00AM EST Last updated on Monday, Nov. 09, 2009 4:41AM EST
With classes cancelled after the government declared a flu epidemic, Eric Barsadanyan and his friends spend their days hunched over cigarettes and soft drinks in the gloom of an empty coffee shop on the third floor of an equally empty shopping mall.
They had not heard of the H1N1 virus even a week ago. But they are pretty sure they understand it now.
"You catch it from imported food and clothing that isn't clean," said Mr. Barsadanyan, an 18-year-old first-year medical student who wears his close-cropped hair shaved into stripes along the sides.
He is not worried because he heard that the Ministry of Health has taken a somewhat unusual step. "They sprayed the city," he explained, "with the necessary products."
Ukraine has been awash with such misinformation about H1N1 for the last week, since Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko set off a public panic by shutting schools, banning public gatherings and warning that whole cities might have to be quarantined to prevent the spread of the disease. They were the most draconian measures taken by any country since the flu first appeared in Mexico last spring.
Alexander Prokopenko/Reuters
Ukraine's Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko wears a protective mask as she visits a hospital in Ivano-Frankivsk. Ukraine has closed schools and banned public meetings for a three-week period after confirming its first death from the H1N1 flu.
But it is still far from clear whether Ukraine is in the grips of a runaway H1N1 epidemic, as some officials have suggested, or whether the precautions were a confused overreaction to a predictable winter outbreak of seasonal flu.
The numbers coming from different government agencies and state media have been wildly contradictory.
Depending on the source, the number of reported cases of flu and respiratory illness last month ranged from under 7,000 all the way up to half a million, with no indication of how many people normally fall ill or die from the flu in the winter in this country of 40 million people.
The Ministry of Health has also issued conflicting information on the number of flu cases, flu-related deaths and suspected deaths due to the H1N1 virus. At one point, according to a state news agency report, a ministry official said flu deaths were down 10 per cent over last year.
An initial assessment from the World Health Organization - which sent a team of medical experts to Ukraine after a desperate plea for emergency aid from the country's President - was that the H1N1 virus could be confirmed as the cause of one of some 80 reported deaths from flu in the past two weeks.
The inconsistencies only increased public uncertainty about what was actually happening, and many Ukrainians appeared to have decided to prepare for the worst.
Across the country, people have emptied pharmacies of masks, gauze, vitamins and every variety of flu and cold medication. Rumours abound that helicopters have tried to disinfect Kiev by spraying it with chlorine gas. Government officials have gone on national television to deny other rumours that rural western Ukraine is in the grip of a deadly unnamed plague.
The flu epidemic was announced against the backdrop of a tightly fought presidential campaign pitting President Victor Yushchenko, the leader of Ukraine's 2004 Orange Revolution, against Ms. Tymoshenko. He was forced to cancel a planned campaign rally last week after the ban on public gatherings was announced.
A third candidate, the opposition leader Victor Yanukovych, has accused his rivals of trying to exploit public health fears to advance their flagging campaigns.
For many ordinary people, the political squabbling has added another element of doubt to the H1N1 scare.
"There is always some kind of fever - economic, health-wise or political - before an election. It's a nice way for politicians to show they are doing something," said Larysa Kostrikina, a graphic artist. "I think this one will be over when the election is over" in January.
Not even gauze was available in the city by midweek. But that did not stop people from stopping in at every pharmacy in hopes of finding a talisman against a virus that many referred to as the "lung plague."
Anything, it seemed, would do for the crowd gathered around the window of a tiny drug store outside the entrance to the Pozdnyaki subway station in Kiev one evening last week.
"I'm not sick. I just want to strengthen my immune system," said one middle-aged woman wrapped in a heavy overcoat and a fraying homemade mask. She was looking for a Russian-made cream that was particularly sought-after in Kiev because it is supposed to kill viruses when spread inside the nostrils.
In Canada and many Western countries, the H1N1 virus has been in the news for months and a public debate has been raging for weeks over how to handle the vaccine. That debate has passed many other countries by, however.
In Ukraine, until the government abruptly declared an epidemic last week, the new virus was the subject of only sketchy references in the media.
"People naturally are panicked because they don't know about this and haven't been prepared for it," said Michail Radutsky, president of the private Boris Clinic, one of the biggest private clinics in the country.
Its doctors have seen four times the usual number of patients in the past week, he said. Some have flu-like symptoms. Most, however, are just frightened.
***
I am stopping myself from wanting to contact this reporter and saying WTF!!!
BUT - did you Catch the part of the "SPRAYING OF THE CITY"!!
The Globe put that in to Counter all the claims and accounts people saw of planes spraying the city the day before the outbreak!
From all I have read and included in the blog - in a post below - is the government said they did NOT authorize spraying or low flying planes that day!
So, now the question is, "Did they or did they not, spray the city themselves"?
Can someone from the Ukraine answer that question?
Did the government actually make an announcement saying they were "Spraying the City to combat the Swine Flu"?
Oh, one other thing - this was written today and the reporter couldn't bother looking at the OFFICIAL Numbers of the people Sick - She uses from 7000 to 1/2 a million. (Oh, you like how she put 1/2 a million in letters NOT Numbers!) I guess 500,000 would not look too good and I definitely guess putting the Official numbers of 1,031,597 would look even worst!
Sorry, I am going off on a rant here, I honestly did not think the situation in the Ukraine, would be spun out as it is here, in a MSM piece.
I read this article and was also flabbergasted at the outrageous down playing of the situation. It boggles my mind that they can hype up swine flu that is milder than seasonal flu and then say that the Ukraine is over reacting to this new outbreak.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely crazy.
I have a very close friend who's 8 year old grand dauthter was diagnosed with AH1n1 three days ago. The hospital wouldn't admit her because it was full. The next day the child was coughing and there was blood in her sputum. She was once again brought to the hospital and once again she was sent home. Her family is freaking out! The hospital provided the Tami Flu vaccine, oxygen and a tent to place her under. Our hospitals are full in Canada and that certainly is not being reported here in the news. What the hell is up with that!!!!!
ReplyDeleteI too read the article and posted a comment about the news article which was running on newswire.ca (which you also have posted on your blog). My signature is Peter Louis.
ReplyDeleteNowhere in the article does it report that some Canadian companies are providing aid to the Ukraine. Isn't that newsworthy?
Also, I read a number of news post over a week ago explaining that aircraft were spraying the cities and this article confirms it. I don't believe it has been confirmed what the substance was though.
I am very confused as to why the people in te Ukraine have no prior knowledge of H1N1. It is amazing how poorly researched this article is and even more amazing that an 18 year old medical student thinks the flu is gotten from imported food and dirty clothing. Huh?
ReplyDeleteI also read numerous articles about the aircraft spraying when this story first broke. I have never, ever, ever heard of treating a population for a virus by spraying the air. In fact there are hospital workers in the USA who are refusing to use the nasal vaccine in the hospitals because it causes the live vaccine to enter the air and infect others who may be in the area of the over-spray. Would this not be a similar fear if one were to spray a vaccine over a city?
If it even was a vaccine...