Dana Blankenhorn

Rethinking Healthcare

A1N1 proving limits of health technology

By Dana Blankenhorn | Jul 2, 2009 |

When I flew to Shanghai in May a scene from CSI: Wherever broke out.

Three people, dressed as if going into a clean room, entered the plane with instruments at the ready.

Each passenger had their temperature taken, remotely, and anyone measuring over 99 degrees Fahrenheit got further testing. (PoliceOne sells some nifty bio suits.)

It was hard not to laugh, but it was no joke. Lots of folks are having their Chinese sojourns canceled because they, or someone near them, had what might have been A1N1 swine flu.

Throughout my trip the panic spread. People handed out masks on the street. Every food service worker, and many public safety workers, wore them. It wasn’t until we were flying back into Chicago, and I watched a Chinese passenger finally remove his mask, that the panic subsided.

Sadly it isn’t doing any good. The flu is spreading worldwide and it’s deadlier than first supposed. Some cases are even resisting the latest anti-viral drugs.

It’s unlikely that there have already been 1 million U.S. cases, as one CDC official recently estimated. But there have been a bunch. And there are more on the way.

So we go to phase two, vaccines. As many as 600 doses of vaccine may be needed just for the U.S. And that may be just the first wave. Flus mutate. That’s why we get vaccines yearly for seasonal flu.

All this proves the limits of modern health technology in the face of a global market. This flu spread mainly via the air, literally, following global airline routes. It then spreads from person-to-person through the air. Those masks don’t help.

One thing our rising health care bill in the U.S. proved is that treating only the rich and middle class does not make a healthy society. This realization will eventually prove global, thanks to A1N1. We need a lot more global coordination, and every type of technology deployed, if we’re to keep the global economy alive.

Biohazard suits won’t work.

 
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    mheartwood

    07/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A1N1 proving limits of health technology

    I'm going to play devils advocate here and I'm sure I'll sound very insensitive for it.

    You say:
    "We need a lot more global coordination, and every type of technology deployed, if we?re to keep the global economy alive."

    However, if one looks back in history at the black plague, the fact that it killed off a third of the population of Europe did wonders for the European economy. As people died, they left their wealth behind for the survivors. Instead of everyone being "poor", suddenly the survivors found themselves with excess money with which to go out and buy things, which they did. This caused quite a jump in the economy. A global pandemic of fatal proportions might be just what we need to get us out of the current gloabal economic downturn.

    (That sounded a whole lot more insensitive than I meant it to.)

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    brain.trust

    07/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: A1N1 proving limits of health technology

    "One thing our rising health care bill in the U.S. proved is that treating only the rich and middle class does not make a healthy society."

    Oddly, healthcare is already free to the poor: all they have to do is show up at a county or not-for-profit agency for treatment. All children's vaccinations and infant food are free to qualifying folks.

    Where do you live that only rich and middle class get medical treatment? Do you want me to pay for YOUR healthcare, because that is what's going to happen. How about veterans who rightfully use the VA Hospital system? Do they get to pay out of their military retirement for your healthcare too?

    To assume that "universal healthcare" is a panacea is, even on the face of it, absurd. Get folks off their duffs and exercise, stop smoking, and stop with the disgusting snack food. It also wouldn't hurt for the elitists to stop traveling to third world countries where they can acquire the most disgusting of the diseases, and bring them back here, where the healthcare is second to none.

    I don't have to "Rethink" healthcare at all, as we have the best system in the world, without changing a thing.

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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for nearly 25 years and has covered the online world professionally since 1985. He founded the Interactive Age Daily for CMP Media, and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Advertising Age's "NetMarketing" supplement, and dozens of other publications over the years.

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a technology reporter since 1982, a business reporter since 1978, and a writer for as long as he can remember. His Schwab IRA has a few tech stocks in it, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials bought over 10 years ago. But the vast majority of his tiny fortune (emphasis on the word tiny) is invested in mutual funds. He presently writes for no one else but ZDNet, SmartPlanet and himself. But if you've got an opportunity let him know. If he takes the gig he"ll first add it to this disclosure page.
Rethinking Healthcare examines innovation in the health care industry covering topics such as electronic and personal health records, treatment, privacy, regulation and using information technology to manage and monitor chronic conditions.