|
October
30, 2009 The
H1N1 Issue: Flu Pandemic, Fear Pandemic, or Both? James
L. Chestnut B.Ed., M.Sc., D.C., C.C.W.P. The H1N1 issue has become so
prevalent that I thought it appropriate to share some factual perspective. I
realize that factual perspective is neither newsworthy nor popular when
people are in the midst of a mob mentality of fear but I'm willing to risk
unpopularity in order to encourage people to be guided by science, reason,
and logic. As you've heard me say so many
times the key to finding the truth is asking the right questions. If we don't
ask the right questions we will never get the right answers. Irrational fear
usually comes from asking the wrong questions or failing to ask the right
ones. As I often point out it is not what we don't know that poses the
greatest danger, it is what we think we know that is false. We also must be
aware of confounding factors creating self fulfilling prophecies. Sometimes
fear is rational, sometimes it is not. Regardless, the most important thing
is to ACCURATELY assess the threat and then identify an evidence-based,
logical, reasonable, and RATIONAL response or course of action. Let's start with the H1N1 flu
virus itself. Clearly this flu virus is a
reality and clearly it can lead to illness. The most important question is
what kind of illness. The FACT is that the type of illness associated with
this virus in over 99.9% of CASES is mild to moderate flu symptoms which
include fever, nausea which can include vomiting, and of course general
malaise. Not very pleasant to be sure but is this any different than the
symptoms associated with the flu viruses that have been the source of the
seasonal flu for the past 50 years? No. Although not every seasonal flu virus
is associated with vomiting the truth is that vomiting is not considered
serious. Seriously uncomfortable - yes, seriously risky in terms of death or
severe complications - no. But what about the deaths from
H1N1? We all must admit and understand
that even the thought of a child dying is enough to send any parent into
hysterics. I can't think of anything more frightening. So let me be clear. I
am not suggesting that the threat of harm or death to my child or any child
is not something to fear. What I am suggesting is that we RATIONALLY assess
the threat and then assess our fear level to see if it is appropriate. Good
decisions, decisions that minimize threat and maximize safety, are NOT based
on irrational fear. Fear is our worst enemy. Logical interpretation of
available facts is our best ally. Here is what we need to know
before we can make a decision about an appropriate fear level associated with
risk of death from H1N1. First we need to know how many deaths have been
caused by H1N1 in any given population. The next question to ask is whether
or not those who have died had underlying illnesses that made them more
susceptible or more at risk. In other words we need to know how many of the
deaths ASSOCIATED with H1N1 are actually CAUSED by H1N1. To assess the absolute risk of
dying from H1N1 we need to divide the number of deaths in any given
population by the number of people in that given population. In Canada as of
Oct 17, 2009 there had been a total of 1,604 hospitalizations, and 83 deaths
associated with H1N1. By the way by this time H1N1 was already being
portrayed as a DEADLY PANDEMIC. So, out of a population of approximately 35
MILLION there were 83 deaths. This means your chance of dying of H1N1 up to
this point was 83/35,000,000 which is one in 421,687. This means the chance
of death from H1N1 was 0.0002%. To date these risks are similar in
the United States and throughout the rest of the world. It is not easy to get exact
numbers on the number of deaths that are caused by underlying conditions or
secondary bacterial infections but estimates are that these would represent
at least 99% of all deaths associated with H1N1. So, if you do not have an
underlying illness your chance of dying from H1N1 is 1% of 0.0002%. Not
exactly worthy of widespread panic. The chances of dying in a car
accident, airplane accident, a fall, from complications of air pollution,
from complications from industrial toxins or from medical treatment are
EXPONENTIALLY GREATER. What is the difference? The media and the health
authorities are not focusing your attention on these risks. You have more
chance of dying in a car accident on your way to get an H1N1 vaccine than
dying from H1N1. Statistically it could be concluded that it is an undue risk
to get into a car and get the vaccine! I could not find any published
peer-reviewed data to determine whether the H1N1 vaccine is safe or
effective. In other words there is no available information that would be
required for any other medical intervention that the H1N1 vaccine works or if
it is safe. This does not mean it is not safe or effective, it just means we
have no data which would be considered scientifically valid to utilize to
form our opinions. Even if we assume the vaccine is safe and effective,
statistically there is still more risk of death from the car ride to get the
vaccine than from dying from H1N1! So what is going on in my opinion?
Well I think some very well intentioned people are allowing fear rather than
science and data to guide public policy. I'm not alone in this opinion by the
way. Have a read of the following quotes from a recent article published in
The British Medical Journal entitled "Calibrated response to emerging
infections" http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/extract/339/sep03_2/b3471.
In fact read this entire article, I think it offers a very good perspective
and it is very well referenced. Pay particular attention to how
the health authorities have changed the definition of a flu pandemic! "Since the emergence of novel
A/H1N1, descriptions of pandemic flu (both its causes and its effect) have
changed to such a degree that the difference between seasonal flu and
pandemic flu is now unclear. WHO, for example, for years defined pandemics as
outbreaks causing "enormous numbers of deaths and illness," but in
early May, removed this phrase from the definition." Changing views of pandemic flu,
before and after emergence of influenza A/H1N1 virus:
"But the 2009 pandemic, taken
as a whole, bears little resemblance to the forecasted pandemic. Pandemic
A/H1N1 virus is not a new subtype but the same subtype as seasonal A/H1N1
that has been circulating since 1977." "Furthermore, a substantial
portion of the population may have immunity. The US Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) found that 33% of those aged over 60 had cross
reactive antibody to novel A/H1N1,which may explain why cases have been rare
in elderly people." Interestingly a recent report by CBC in Canada
indicated that 4 preliminary studies showed that the chance of having
immunity to H1N1 is DECREASED if you have regularly been vaccinated for
seasonal flu. It will be interesting to see if they pursue this any further
and publish the results in a peer-reviewed journal. "On 26 April, with 20 cases
and no deaths in the US, the Department of Health and Human Services declared
a nationwide public health emergency." "The SARS outbreak showed
that large numbers of infected people are not necessary to generate concern
and fear over disease. The SARS virus is known to have affected only 8096
people globally, but the fear of infection, involuntary quarantine, travel
restrictions and subsequent political antagonisms, and at least $18bn in losses
were felt by far more. It was not the virus but the response to it that
caused these social and economic harms." So what is my conclusion; is the
H1N1 issue a flu pandemic, a fear pandemic, or both? My conclusion is that at this
point it is a pandemic of fear and NOT a flu pandemic. Of course it depends
on how you define pandemic! The data available make it clear that we are
experiencing an H1N1 seasonal flu BUT that to date this is not associated
with significant risk of death or serious illness. The FACT is that the current level
of alarm and fear are NOT supported by data. However, this could change. What
we cannot say is that things will not get worse. There is sufficient data to
date to strongly suggest that it won't but data can only accurately tell us
what has happened not what will happen. Certainly the odds are that H1N1 will
pass with the same overblown fear and unactuated threat as SARS. Only time
and data with tell. I do have some concerns about the
fact that testing for H1N1 has now been virtually all but discontinued. The
authorities are now assuming that any case of the flu is H1N1. This means we
will NEVER have any valid data about incidence, prevalence, or death rates.
All such assessments without actual confirmation of infection are, in scientific
terms, invalid. The term they will use is speculative. Sounds better than
saying we are guessing. Another concern is that deaths
associated with H1N1, as with all previous seasonal flu viruses, are vastly
overestimated. The annual published death rates for flu are NOT from
confirmed deaths due to flu and in fact even CDC published stats reveal that
most deaths "associated" with the flu are actually not from the flu
at all but almost entirely from pneumonia. Less than one percent of deaths
reported as associated with seasonal flu are actually caused by seasonal flu
and even in these deaths the vast majority occur in people with underlying
conditions. Another concern is that it is
unlikely that we will ever get any data on whether or not those who have been
vaccinated have been protected. If one actually reads the primary research
studies (not the news or published summaries by health ministries) on the
seasonal flu vaccine what one finds is that the data does not support claims
that the regular seasonal flu vaccine significantly decreases the incidence
of flu or complications from it. Recently there has been some admission that
the vaccines do not prevent the flu and that indeed they only guess correct
on which virus to vaccinate against less than 30% of the time. However the
health authorities still justify recommending the vaccine by claiming it
decreases the severity of flu and complications from it. All I am asking for
is to have DATA guide policy not DOGMA. One of the sources of controversy
is that vaccine benefits are often reported as relative risk reductions not
absolute risk reductions so when one applies the results in real life one
quickly realizes that the actual reduction of risk for those vaccinated vs
not vaccinated is not statistically significant. They often report that the
flu vaccine reduces hospitalizations or deaths but they report the relative
difference between vaccinated vs unvaccinated not the absolute difference. In
other words there might be 5000 people in each study group and there may be 4
deaths amongst those unvaccinated and 2 deaths among those vaccinated. This
relative difference is reported as a "50% reduction in deaths in those
vaccinated vs not vaccinated". Of course what this really means is that
if you are vaccinated, and you get the flu, you have a 2 in 5000 chance of
death. If you are unvaccinated and you get the flu you have a 4 in 5000
chance of death. An absolute difference of 2 in 5000 - not even remotely
significant and certainly not worthy of the national vaccination campaigns
and the billions of dollars spent on the vaccines. YES, they do report things
this way!! Some good references on this topic
are Jackson et al., Evidence of bias in estimates of influenza vaccine
effectiveness in seniors, International Journal of Epidemiology 2006; 35:
337-344 and Jefferson, T. Influenza vaccination: policy versus evidence.
British Medical Journal 2006; 333: 912-915 and Jefferson et al. Efficacy and
effectiveness of influenza vaccines in elderly people: a systematic review.
Lancet 2005; 366: 1165-74 and Simonsen et al. Mortality benefits of influenza
vaccination in elderly people: an ongoing controversy. Lancet Infectious
Disease 2007; 7: xxx-xx. But doesn't it seem like we have
more flu and more associated deaths this year? Yes is does SEEM that way. However
the truth is that although the flu seems to have come early this year it has
not come with any greater incidence or seriousness - at least not yet. The
real story is that although death rates are not significantly higher than
most years there have been some deaths among children and this is just so
tragic that it causes great fear and anxiety. HOWEVER, the risk to otherwise
healthy children of dying from H1N1 is FAR less than the risk of dying in a
car accident. This does not minimize the importance of these tragic losses,
it just puts them in perspective in terms of absolute risk. But aren't more kids away from
school and adults away from work this year? Yes, absolutely. However the
frenzy of fear this year has changed things significantly and skewed them
toward a self fulfilling prophecy. This year if anyone has even a sniffle
they are kept home because we have all been told that we are in the midst of
a deadly pandemic and that it is our moral obligation to stay home. In past
years we have always gone to work with the flu because for the most part we
can work through it. We can't logically use the number of people away from
school or work as an accurate indicator of the severity of this year's flu
pandemic. We have to use the data about illness rates, severity, and death
rates. When we use this data to form our opinions and policies our fear level
will certainly move away from hysteria. What is ironic is that the health
authorities have started vaccinating those people who have been identified as
most susceptible to serious complications. They have also stated that we
should avoid close contact in order to avoid spread. Now we have those
identified as being most susceptible congregating in close contact waiting
for the vaccine! Remember these people also had to put themselves at GREAT
risk (relative to risk of death from H1N1) by traveling on the road to get to
the vaccination site. Obviously the minute risk of death from a car accident
is not a rational reason to avoid driving to get the vaccine if you think
this is a good strategy. This is a valid use of risk analysis to help you put
your fears about death from H1N1 into perspective. Fear and anxiety cause the
release of stress hormones that down-regulate your immune system! So what should we do; what is a
scientific, logical and reasonable strategy?
| ||||||||||||||||||||||


*"THINK WELL" a presentation by Dr. Michael Quartararo will be held in our Guilderland office on October 13th and in our Ballston Spa office on October 14th. Both presentations will begin at 7pm. If you'd like to attend, contact us via our website:
Dr. Sarah Westcott
Recent Comments