While the journey and research into H1N1 has been quite interesting for me, it’s time for me to move on from this topic and get back to my real life (Happy birthday honey! You get your wife back!). So I thought I’d leave you with a few final thoughts I have about swine flu.
Analogies
One of the main ways both the public and the media have tried to make sense of swine flu is through analogies, or comparisons. We’ve got H1N1 compared to seasonal flu; swine flu 2009 to swine flu 1976 (or 1957 or 1918). We’ve got H1N1 media hype compared to the hype around other illnesses such as Avian Flu or SARS. We’ve got child deaths from H1N1 compared to child deaths from seasonal flu, or cancer, or car accidents, or malaria. Use the right analogy and you can spin the risks of H1N1 anyways you like!
When reading such comparisons, my advice is to do your best to think about how the analogy works (how are the things being compared similar?) and how is does not (how are they different?). For example, perhaps the most common comparison is between H1N1 and seasonal flu. H1N1 has killed just over 1000 in the US, whereas seasonal flu kills 36,000. So why all the fuss about H1N1? Well, let’s note the ways in which the analogy works—were talking about flus, and the same country, and deaths; so far, so good. How does it not work? H1N1 death totals are lab-confirmed; seasonal flu totals are estimates. H1N1 death distribution is very different than seasonal flu; for some groups, like children, there have in fact been more deaths from H1N1 than seasonal flu (171 (probably 199) vs. 82), and we’re not done the flu season yet. I’m not saying, “Panic! H1N1 is a huge risk and we’re all gonna die!” But I am saying that the dismissive “it’s milder than seasonal flu” misses some details that may be relevant in assessing your family’s risk from this illness.
Another common comparison is child deaths from H1N1 vs. child deaths from other causes, like car accidents, cancer, or malaria. This analogy is helpful in keeping the overall risks of flu in perspective, but it can also be used in misleading ways. More children die of car accidents than drowning each year in Canada, but that doesn’t make the deaths from drowning any less tragic nor the desire to prevent them any less real. Perhaps a stronger analogy would be to compare pediatric flu deaths to deaths from other vaccine-preventable diseases. Almost 200 children in the US have died from H1N1—far less than die in car accidents, to be sure—but when was the last time we heard of that many kids dying of a vaccine-preventable illness in a first world country? If these deaths were due to measles, or polio, or diphtheria—something other than “just a flu”, a disease most of us have had and survived--would our assessment of risk or mildness of the illness be different?
Or the 1976 GBS fiasco after the swine flu shot. Yes, it is absolutely true that in 1976 “the risks of the vaccine outweighed the risks of the illness”: only ONE person died of swine flu that year. But it’s not 1976 anymore. How do these risks play out using 2009’s death totals? And the comparison to 1918 cannot be properly made without thinking about all the ways in which our world is not as it was then: antivirals, antibiotics, universal health care or better access to medicine, not on the heels of a world war, better and more accurate testing techniques, ventilators, etc. It’s clear the 2009 pandemic is not going to be a repeat of the 1918 Spanish Flu; of course, its also clear that the if 1918 Spanish flu hit in 2009 it would be nowhere near as devastating (though I think it would still be far more devastating than today’s swine flu).
My point is, I think there is a reasonable and rational middle ground to be had in assessing one’s risks from H1N1 between panic on the one side, and dismissal on the other. And these risks are not the same for everyone.
I can understand why some folks choose not to get vaccinated: the number of tests/studies for safety and effectiveness of the H1N1 vaccine are few; all vaccines have side effects, some serious; no vaccine is 100% effective; it is possible that serious side effects of vaccination are under-reported, and that new side effects or illnesses will be shown to be connected to vaccines in some way; and the risk of serious complications from H1N1 is not the same for everyone. This does not make these folks who choose not to vaccinate irrational or blindly following the word of conspiracy theorists or bad science. (Though some who choose not to vaccinate undoubtedly are!)
I can also understand why some folks choose to vaccinate. They may be in a group that is at higher risk for serious H1N1 complications or death (e.g., asthmatic); they may have read the research on vaccines and know that while there are occasional side effects, some severe, the known risks of illnesses generally outweigh the known risks of vaccines; and most vaccines work well at preventing illness in most people most of the time. This does not make these folks unthinking, blind followers of "the government" and "Big Pharma". (Though some who choose to vaccinate undoubtedly are!)
For those wanting to keep current on H1N1 developments, I highly recommend the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control’s H1N1 page. They post daily and weekly updates, and these updates have data from around the world, and links to recent studies, news stories, etc. The most recent update, for example, has info about the mutated strains of H1N1 in Norway, the Tamiflu-resistant strains in the US and Wales, as well as preliminary safety data about the vaccines. What I find most admirable about this site is that they by and large separate fact from spin (for example, while they acknowledge the fact about the mutations, they say explicitly that it is too soon to draw any conclusions about the significance); they give references to papers that contradict each other in their findings, and they report negative events (e.g., GBS and foetal deaths post-vaccine) as well as positive. They are a great source of information in and of themselves, as well as providing links to all kinds of starting points for further research.
Thanks for all your kind comments, as well as those who have challenged what I have written—there are still more questions than answers about H1N1. Stay well. Now, back to our usual family life programming…