Locked up

Apr. 25th, 2009 06:45 am
simgaroop: (Timmy toddler)
[personal profile] simgaroop
MEXICO CITY – The schools and museums are closed. Sold-out games between Mexico's most popular soccer teams are being played in empty stadiums. Health workers are ordering sickly passengers off subways and buses. And while bars and nightclubs filled up as usual, even some teenagers were dancing with surgical masks on.

Across this overcrowded capital of 20 million people, Mexicans are reacting with fatalism and confusion, anger and mounting fear at the idea that their city may be ground zero for a global epidemic of a new kind of flu — a strange mix of human, pig and bird viruses that has epidemiologists deeply concerned.


And it's just being announced that schools will be closed at least a week.

That means, no work for at least a week for me :(. And according to the news, they are still evaluating if they will eventually declare a full quarantine in the city.

There are no more masks available on stores. We don't have masks, so we're going to search for some today because it's being advised to not leave home without them.

I won't lie to you, I'm also scared :(

(no subject)

Date: 2009-04-25 12:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] leilia.livejournal.com
There isn't a lot you can do to stop a virus until you know the vector. I mean the flu is primarily transferred through the mucous membranes through things like doorknobs and people coughing and sneezing in crowded areas. However that is not the only way to get it. And you also have to consider how long the virus can live outside of the host. Most of them have a short lifespan, only a matter of minutes or hours.

That is why quarantine is effective, if the disease is not truly airborne then making people stay off the streets and out of crowded places works. The disease literally has nowhere to go. It worked for cities dealing with the Plague back in the 1300s and it why doctors tell people to stay home when they are sick. Not to help the sick person, but to prevent the infection from spreading more.

Your point about the mask is a good one. And something I didn't think of.

Most of what I know about epidemiology is from history and reading. So I am by no means an expert. But recently I've had to do a lot of research on how disease spreads and my mother is a biologist.

A lot of times, officials give a placebo answer to prevent mass hysteria. Especially if the public is clamoring for some kind of response. The masks aren't a bad idea, per se. But quarantine is better.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-04-25 05:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] profbutters.livejournal.com
Of course, since plague is also spread by rat fleas, not sure that quarantine alone solved the problem. Sanitation plays a major role, too.

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