fbpx New assessment of 09 swine impact | Page 17 | Science in the net

New assessment of 09 swine impact

Primary tabs

Read time: 2 mins

Knowing the scale of a potential threat is fundamental to elaborate an effective strategy to face it. This is particularly true when dealing with epidemics. In 2009, 18500 laboratory-confirmed deaths associated with influenza A H1N1, also known as “swine flu”, have been reported, but this number is likely to be an underestimate.

To obtain a more precise evaluation of the swine flu lethality, the team led by Dr. Marc-Alain Widdowson and Dr. Fatimah Dawood, from the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, developed a new statistical approach to estimate global mortality associated with the first 12 months of circulation of the virus. The study, published on Lancet, revealed that globally there were 284500 respiratory and cardiovascular deaths associated with 2009 pandemic influenza A H1N1, 51% of which occurred in Africa and southeast Asia. Also, swine flu disproportionately affected young people compared with seasonal influenza epidemics (80% of deaths were in individuals younger than 64 years).

The big difference between the CDC estimate and the previous data about H1N1 mortality is due to the fact that, as explained by Dr. Donato Greco, member of the TellMe consortium, «the previous number was only deaths in virologically confirmed influenza A cases, while the vast majority of flu deaths do not have a laboratory confirmation. The CDC numbers are quite logic, taking in consideration that only in Italy the annual seasonal flu epidemic kills some 8000 individuals. The CDC article reminds how much the flu pandemic was underestimated and affected by a furious criticism against technical and political authorities.»

These results strengthen the conviction, shared by all members of the TellMe consortium, that the development of new and accurate communication strategies is more and more necessary, in order to avoid extreme alarmism but also to not underestimate the dangerousness of possible future pandemic events.

Autori: 
Sezioni: 
Dossier: 
Pandemic Flu

prossimo articolo

Responsibility for the damages caused by climate change and attribution science

Disputes and legal actions concerning climate change are on the rise, as are those aimed at obtaining compensation for damages caused by specific atmospheric events from parties believed to be responsible. This is a result of the findings of attribution science, a discipline aimed at clarifying the causal relationship between the occurrence of extreme weather events and climate change.

Image credits: Markus Spiske on Unsplash

In an article from ten years ago, addressing the issue of climate litigations, the legal disputes concerning climate change, the author noted that most of them were brought against governments to introduce limits or controls on greenhouse gas emitting activities or against companies involved in their production (especially oil multinationals) to comply with existing regulations.