Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Harbinger

I’m scared and excited about the swine flu outbreak all at the same time. SARS and Bird Flu were certainly scares in their day, but were mostly confined to Asia. A few people in North America died, but we were sheltered from the worst of the impact. Not so with the swine flu. Coming from Mexico, it may have more of an impact on how the US administration views its neighbourhood and the world.

They can build as many fences as they want and it’s not going to stop disease from spreading. The real problem America faces is that they have what amounts to a third world country directly on their border, and their mentality has been to wall themselves off instead of attempting to solve the problem. Instead of lecturing the European Union on how it is important for them to bring in Turkey, maybe America will start to realize that they need to take a European style approach to dealing with their less well off neighbours. It would be much easier to prevent pandemics from spreading if there was better funded health care in Mexico. I sometimes wonder how many Americans will have to die from a pandemic before they realize that. Maybe this will be the one.

As much as I don’t want to see a lot of suffering, it would be a stark demonstration of the interconnectedness of the world. Unlike 9/11 there isn’t really anyone you can blame for this problem, unless you want to blame the Mexican government. Still, I’m not convinced that it would be pretense to invade. I would however be interested in seeing a new administration declaring a global war on communicable diseases. If we spent half what we are spending on the war on terror, many problems could be solved, and much goodwill towards America generated.

Two closing thoughts.

I read somewhere the suggestion of turning Guantanamo Bay into a US funded centre for research into tropical diseases once it is closed. I think that’s an incredible idea which the current outbreak may serve to reinforce. It could turn one of the symbols of American hypocrisy into a beacon of American idealism.

My second thought is about the medical staff we poach from the developing world. Are they really needed more in the rich west than back in their countries of origin? If rich westerners start getting killed by diseases which originate in places they have never heard of, maybe we will reconsider our policy…or at least start spending on medical schools in the developing world.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

One problem is that these poor countries rely so heavily on tourism and reporting a disease would impact it.