There was an outbreak of plague in Santa Fe that killed a bunch of people some years ago, coming into the human population from the critter population. You don't hear too much about that. Nor, I expect, did you hear about the plague breaking out among the prairie dogs right next to people's houses in Boulder. Like the Oklahoma City possibly Muslim bomber, certain facts seem to get suppressed. Not necessarily because the press is nefarious but because the audience really doesn't want to hear it. Being scared of things far away and highly implausible is far more satisfying than contemplating the dangers that lurk right around the corner or right at our feet.
This excellent article in today's New York Times by a physician makes the same point. Instead of the danger of plague, she focusses on dangers more endemic to New York, such as AIDS and emphysema.
Just in time for Halloween, the usual yearly ritual of terror by headline is now playing itself out in medical offices everywhere. Last year it revolved around flu shots; a few years ago it was anthrax and smallpox; a few years before that it was the "flesh-eating bacteria"; and before that it was Ebola virus, and Lyme disease and so on back into the distant past. This year it's the avian flu....
A few years ago, a young woman waited patiently to be seen in our office after hours. She was a patient of one of my colleagues, but she couldn't wait for their scheduled appointment; she needed to see someone right away.
"I'm worried I have Lyme disease," she said. "I have all the symptoms. I think I need to be treated."
"But you have AIDS," I said.
"I'm tired and weak and I have fevers and sweats. I've lost my appetite. I can't think straight. I'm losing so much weight!"
She had seen a TV news report on Lyme disease, and then she had checked the Internet. All her symptoms were right there.
"But you have AIDS," I said. "And you don't want to take meds. That's why you're feeling so bad."
"I'm really scared about Lyme disease," she said. "I really need to get treated."
"If you want to be scared, how about that untreated AIDS of yours?"....
Eventually she coerced my colleague into testing her for Lyme disease and treating her despite negative tests. Then she decided her symptoms might actually be due to a brain tumor, instead. And so it went, until she died of AIDS.....
If you want something to be scared of, how about the drug-resistant Klebsiella that is all over this very hospital, an ordinary run-of-the-mill bacterial strain that has become so resistant to so many antibiotics that we've had to resurrect a few we stopped using 30 years ago because they were so toxic.
That Klebsiella is one scary germ. It's in hospitals all over the country, and by now it's probably killed a thousandfold more people than the avian flu.
But you don't hear much about our Klebsiella. Like our bad habits and our dismally insoluble health insurance tangles, our antibiotic-resistant bacteria are with us, right here, right now. Apparently they all lack the drama, the suspense, the titillating worst-case situations that energize our politicians and turn into a really newsworthy health care scare.
They're all just too real.
6 comments:
I actually met a guy in NM right after he got out of the hospital after recovering from the plague. Tetracycline cleared it right up. So I suppose early diagnosis is the key here.
Oddly enough, I also once lived with a relative of the guy who developed a (the?) plague vaccine. His evaluation: the vaccine wasn't very good. I don't recall the reasons.
"I try my best to stay away from hospitals, it keeps me healthy."
Doctors, too. Except for my regular decennial checkups.
If you want to get scared just think about flesh eating bacteria.
terrye
Without flesh eating bacteria, corpses would stick around forever, like some bad horror movie.
(This is probably not true, but I just thought the idea was cool.)
Plague is not really a danger. Unless someone gets it and isn't diagnosed soon enough...then it's definitely a danger to that specific person.
It's localized and depends on the population of rodents and contact of humans in a specific area.
Same with that horrific hemorragic fever from Africa. In this case, it kills its victims so quickly that it has little chance of spreading out.
Yeah, Syl, but it just so happens that I (and my neighbor) are in the locality and we've got the rodents.
The other aspect of this I didn't mention is Boulder's penchant for prairie dogs. Since we're populated here largely by folks from New York and LA who have never seen wild animals, they're gaga over prairie dogs, and they've infested nearly every conceivable open field or strip of grass next to the road for miles around, deep into the city limits, with prairie dogs. Heedless of the danger.
So, yes, plague can be treated with anti-biotics, until it becomes immune through evolution to the actions of the anti-biotics, as has already happened with Klebsiella.
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