In the UK, 381 people have been affected by swine flu, a fraction of the 19,000 plus people affected worldwide including 117 deaths. In Gaza, the World Health Organization estimates that 5% to 10% of people may need professional support to address long-term mental health problems like depression, trauma and panic attacks after the violence of earlier in the year. In Pakistan, nearly 3m people are displaced including 500,000 children aged under 5 years and according to the UN agency UNFPA, 69,300 pregnant women, 6000 of whom are expected to deliver within the next month, many in squalid conditions.
Meanwhile in Cambodia, new evidence shows that malaria is becoming increasingly resistant to the artemisinin class of drugs which have been the first line of treatment. And today, as with every day, 40,000 children will die, most from preventable, basic conditions such as diarrheoa.
There is no doubt that massive strides have been made in public health over the years which has saved millions of lives. But two problems remain. Too few people have access to basic public health measures such as clean water and vaccinations. And their number is added to daily by the indirect victims of war, the displaced people they leave in their wake who are often suddenly left with no access to the services they had previously enjoyed.
There always will be the poor – both in health and in economy – but maybe part of the Westminster lesson for us all is to ask how much we are putting our own comfort ahead of seeking solutions for those whose health relies on our thoughfulness and perhaps, our frugality?
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June 5th, 2009 at 6:25 am
Australia’s swine flu tally has rocketed by more than a third to nearly 900 as officials scrambled to contain the rapidly spreading virus.
The latest official figures revealed 876 confirmed cases of A(H1N1) influenza in the world’s fourth most affected country – up from 633 a day earlier and single figures just a fortnight ago.
Other Australian states ordered children returning from flu hotspot Victoria to be quarantined, earning the wrath of Melbourne officials.
The island state of Tasmania yesterday joined Queensland, New South Wales and South Australia in ordering that children arriving from Victoria be quarantined for up to seven days to reduce the threat of swine flu.
”The exclusion will apply for seven days from departure from Victoria,” said Tasmania’s Director of Public Health Chrissie Pickin.
”It applies to all children returning from Victoria and other affected areas, whether or not they have a flu-like illness,” she said.
Victoria, which has 752 cases or about 86 percent of the national total, raised its alert level yesterday and has shuttered 14 schools.
Swine flu has now spread to 66 countries with 19,273 people known to have been infected since the disease was first uncovered in April, the World Health Organization said.