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Possible flu pandemic: US government plans to treat sick people
like potential enemies
By Kevin Mitchell
19 January 2008
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The Bush administrations emergency plan for a possible
flu pandemic involves essentially police-state methods that have
nothing to do with effectively combating the illness.
This was the finding of a report released by the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) January 14 that criticized the governments
preparations for a pandemic. The study outlined how federal agencies
have been adopting an increasingly heavy-handed approach toward
what should be considered a public health problem.
The report was presented at the National Press Club in Washington,
D.C. followed by a panel discussion with three top experts: George
Annas and Wendy K. Mariner of Boston University School of Public
Health and Wendy E. Parmet of Northeastern Law School. Each condemned
the governments lack of preparedness on this critical health
issue and explained how its insistence on treating everyone like
a potential flu carrier was extremely counterproductive, to say
the least.
The panel also discussed the fact that the current policies
heavily emphasize the need for coerced vaccinations and military-enforced
quarantines. History shows that treating sick people like
potential enemies only spurs them to avoid the authorities and
exacerbates the spread of disease, said Parmet.
In broad terms, the plans concern the ever-greater likelihood
that the avian influenza, dubbed the bird flu, will
reach the United States on a scale not seen since the worldwide
influenza pandemic of 1918, which killed an estimated 50 to 100
million people. The avian flu is a highly pathogenic virus that
has already killed tens of millions of birds; millions more have
been slaughtered in an effort to contain the disease. Although
the virus is not easily transferable to humans, at least 216 people
have died from the avian flu, according to the World Health Organization
(WHO). Nearly all of the deaths have occurred in Asian countries.
The avian flu is by nature a communicable disease, therefore
to stop the spread of the virus by calling for individual
responsibility is absurd. A rational plan would involve
a large-scale collective effort to prepare and coordinate all
emergency services possible in the event of such a disaster.
In 2003, when the province of Ontario in Canada faced a SARS
outbreak, the government provided income assistance for people
to stay home if they were sick. The fact that the US government
must openly rely upon more draconian measures points to the dilapidated
state of the health infrastructure in America.
When the avian flu was first raised as an issue in 2005, George
W. Bush proposed using the military to quarantine infected sections
of the country, a violation of the Posse Comitatus Act which prohibits
the armed forces from acting as a police force within the United
States, except in cases of insurrection.
The ACLU report explains that shortly after 9/11, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) supported a Model State
Emergency Health Powers Act, which greatly increased the powers
of state governments during a public health emergency.
Among its many provisions was a proposal authorizing mandatory
medical examinations and testing. Section 504 of the Act would
punish those who refused to be vaccinated:
Individuals refusing to be vaccinated or treated shall
be liable for a misdemeanor. [The refusing person] may be subject
to isolation or quarantine... An order of the public health authority
given to effectuate the purposes of this Section shall be immediately
enforceable by any peace officer.
Thus, citizens would be treated not as patients but as criminals.
The proposed act also included provisions that would have exempted
public health officials and their underlings from prosecution
if their vaccine killed the patient.
These provisions were removed after a public outcry, but that
did not stop the state of Florida from enacting the measure. Nor
has it stopped the Bush Administration from encouraging state
governments to update their laws to include forced
vaccinations, mandatory surveillance, isolation and quarantine.
However, these measures would only tend to increase the general
populations distrust of the states health system,
causing those who were sick and infected to avoid public institutions
altogether. This would only make the threat of a full-blown pandemic
that much greater.
The report cited the well-known case of Andrew Speaker, an
attorney from Atlanta. In the spring of 2007, the CDC diagnosed
Speaker with multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). He was
planning to receive specialized treatment in Denver after his
impending honeymoon in Italy. Health officials recommended that
he not travel abroad, but did not forbid his doing so.
While in Italy, the CDC diagnosed Speakers TB as the
more dangerous and highly contagious strain (XDR-TB); at this
point he was told to stay in Europe. He was even placed on the
infamous No-fly list, reserved for suspected terrorists, by Homeland
Security and left to fend for himself. Abandoned, Speaker then
flew to Canada where he illegally crossed the border
into New York State. Once he was in America, Speaker turned himself
in, and after undergoing treatment it was discovered that he carried
the less dangerous MDR-TB after all.
Given the circumstances, Speakers actions were completely
understandable, but what if he had carried the more dangerous
XDR-TB? In that scenario, he would have boarded a transnational
flight where dozens more people risked infection. Therefore, the
CDCs actions, far from allowing Speaker to receive the help
and treatment he needed, increased the likelihood of the disease
spreading by treating him like a wanted man and forcing him to
evade the authorities.
Nevertheless, the media and the political establishment seized
upon this incident as proof that it was far too easy for an infected
person to enter the country and demanded further restrictions
on international travel.
The report also cited the case of Robert Daniels, a 27-year
old TB patient who was held in quarantine against his will in
Phoenix, Arizona. In July 2006, Maricopa County health officials
ordered Daniels to wear a face mask in public at all times, even
though on occasion he admitted that he did not do so.
Instead of approaching this health risk in a rational manner,
such as having him stay in a hospital, health officials turned
him over to the sheriff, where he remained in solitary confinement
in a jail cell for almost a year. He was not allowed access to
showers or hot water and was kept under constant surveillance.
Eventually ACLU lawyers filed suit protesting the cruel and
inhumane treatment he was subjected to. Upon further examination,
doctors discovered that Daniels had a less contagious TB after
all.
In the event of an avian flu pandemic, the government agencies
responsible for the publics health and safety have demonstrated
a willingness to use the last-resort options, such as forced vaccinations
and military quarantines, as the their first line of defense.
As evidenced by Hurricane Katrina, the governments approach
leaves thousands of working-class people at the mercy of any disaster.
Current pandemic plans emphasize the need for individual
responsibility. Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) Secretary Michael Leavitt was reported to have said, Communities
that fail to prepare, expecting the federal government to come
to the rescue, will be tragically mistaken.
Such contempt for large numbers of people could mean a potential
nightmare scenario for lower-income people, as well as the sick
and elderly. Xenophobia could also rear its ugly head, with calls
for tougher immigration enforcement and quarantines directed at
disease-carrying aliens. This issue has already come
into play in the Southwest, where ultra-right nationalists accuse
undocumented Mexican nationals of carrying diseases such as tuberculosis
into the United States.
The Pandemic Influenza Plan of the HHS includes
containment measures such as, bans on large public gatherings,
isolation of symptomatic individuals, prophylaxis of the entire
community with antiviral drugs, and various forms of movement
restrictionspossibly even including a quarantine.
Also, the ACLU commented on an October 18, 2007 presidential
directive on Public Health and Medical Preparedness.
This directive is aimed at coordinating the activities of the
Department of Homeland Security with those of the Department of
Health and Human Services in an effort to brief non-health officials
and state governors on the risks to public health posed
by relevant threats and catastrophic health events (including
attacks involving weapons of mass destruction), and ensure
that full use is made of Department of Defense expertise and resources.
The directive also calls for building a national biosurveillance
program, utilizing public health information systems to collect
information on unspecified diseases, as well as individual health
conditions. If implemented it would bear strong resemblance to
the National Security Agencys data-mining procedures, only
with medical files instead of phone-tapping. It would be overseen
by the Epidemiologic Surveillance Federal Advisory Committee,
established by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, in
cooperation with the Secretaries of Defense, Veterans Affairs,
and Homeland Security.
See Also:
Bush seizes on flu
threat to press for martial law power
[7 October 2005]
Hurricane Katrina:
a public health and environmental disaster
[21 September 2005]
New Orleans: the specter
of military dictatorship
[10 September 2005]
Canada: Budget cuts
played pivotal role in SARS crisis
[24 May 2003]
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