Once the word "pandemic" was uttered the national news media's coverage of the coronavirus shifted into overdrive. Each new case of the virus is breathtakingly reported. Each flu-related death triggers a breaking news alert. The media treatment is actually scarier than the pandemic.
This inflammatory reporting incited a full fledged panic attack. Stock markets quaked in a selling frenzy, wiping out trillions in value. Businesses issued dire reports on future earnings amid supply chain disruptions. The havoc sent the economy teetering on the brink of a recession.
What was missing in the scorched earth news coverage was any sense of perspective. Without a frame of reference, people became alarmed by what was reported to be an out-of-control, foreign-born, dangerously lethal, previously unknown virus, dubbed COVID-19.
But was the incendiary coverage justified? Judge for yourself after a review of the facts.
Because the virus was birthed in China, home of the world's most secretive Communist regime, this heightened speculation about the number of cases, the cause of the virus and the death-rates. Instead of exercising restraint in its coverage, the media has operated irresponsibility.
As just one example, based on specious sources there was a flurry of rumors that the coronavirus originated in a Chinese biochemical warfare lab located in Wuhan. An analysis of the virus by 27 scientists and public health officials discredited the claim in the medical journal The Lancet.
In a crisis of this nature, facts really do matter. According to the latest World Health Organization data, there have been 89,527 cases reported and 3,056 deaths worldwide. However, all but 183 of those deaths have been in China, which has recorded the overwhelming majority of cases: 80,174.
The death rate in China's Habel Providence, the epicenter of the virus, now stands at 2.9% of the cases. Although experts agree, that the figure is likely inflated by China's inability to diagnose and count thousands of mild cases in the early stages. Outside Habel, the death rate is 0.3%.
The vast majority of those contaminated with the flu in China have only exhibited mild symptoms and most have recovered. Of the confirmed cases in China, more than 81% are rated mild, according to the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Cases have declined since February 12.
In the U.S., the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) figures show 43 cases out of a population of 320 million. Seventeen people have been hospitalised with the virus and two deaths recorded. Ten states have identified coronavirus cases.
The figures do not include Americans contaminated with the virus who were residing in Habel Providence or quarantined on cruise ships. Among those returning Americans, there were 48 confirmed cases of the virus. Most of the cases (45) were from cruise ship travelers.
As with most flu viruses, the elderly, very young and immune compromised are most at risk. The two U.S. deaths both occurred in elderly people. Healthy individuals are at a low risk. That is why CDC officials continue to report there is a low risk of infection.
COVID-19 officially became a pandemic because cases have been reported in 67 countries. That is the definition of a pandemic. The word does not imply the virus cannot be halted. Or that it is inevitable there will be an uncontainable outbreak. There is reason for caution, but not panic.
In its reporting, many news outlets referenced the SARS virus outbreak in 2003 in an attempt to raise the spectre of a rampant killer. But most neglected to mention the SARS pandemic infected 8,098 people globally causing 774 deaths. That death rate was 0.09%, less than common influenza.
The most recent and deadliest pandemic was the H1N1 swine flu virus that claimed 575,400 deaths worldwide in 2009, according to the CDC. The agency estimated 61 million people in the U.S. suffered from the virus that caused 12,469 deaths.
As these statistics and history show, over time most civilized countries have developed better science for detecting, treating and slowing down the spread of dangerous viruses. Information and real time health data travels faster than in the past. That aids health officials in their efforts to battle the virus.
While each new influenza-like virus grabs headlines, hardly any attention is paid to the garden variety virus that raises its ugly head every winter in the United States. During most influenza seasons, the average death rate is 0.1% of Americans infected with the contagion.
Annual influenza outbreaks seldom make the news. According to the CDC, from 2010 to 2016, annual flu-related deaths ranged from 12,000 to 56,000 during the period. In the 2016-2017 flu season, the virus surged throughout the U.S., killing nearly 80,000, the highest toll in four decades.
During that flu season, 959,000 cases required hospitalization the CDC estimated. One contributor may have been that only 59% of adults and 43% of children were inoculated with the flu vaccine. That means a majority of young people and four-in-ten adults were left unprotected.
Do you recall around-the-clock news coverage of this epidemic? Me neither. That's why the reporting of COVID-19 stands out as an indictment of today's journalism as well as politicians who attempt to use the pandemic as an excuse to attack the administration for its handling of the crisis.
Media pundits are actually suggesting the virus may create an opening for Democrats to exploit against President in the 2020 election. One reporter insisted on calling the contagion the Trump Virus. A health crisis should be met with bipartisanship, not political backbiting.
Democrat presidential candidate Mike Bloomberg has charged Mr. Trump with making "reckless cuts" to the CDC budget. Associated Press (AP) fact-checkers called the allegation false. "Financing for the CDC was increased in the last budget," AP reported.
Another unsubstantiated claim that the administration was responsible for a steady erosion in CDC grants to state and local governments to deal with pandemics. Again AP disputed the allegation. The grant reductions were "set in motion by Congressional measures that predate Trump," AP explained.
Not satisfied, some reporters are demanding to know why a flu vaccine is not available to prevent the spread of COVID-19. "What's taking so long?" they bellow. The answer is months of research and human trials are required before vaccines are certified safe enough to use on the general population.
This is standard procedure. In nearly every case, by the time the new vaccines are ready for public use most pandemics have already subsided with the return of warm weather. Rather than hoping for a vaccine, there are many precautions a family can take to avoid the flu.
Cover your mouth and nose when you cough or sneeze. Wash your hands thoroughly and often. Avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth. Disinfect surfaces that other people touch. And avoid crowds, particularly on cruise ships, which are breeding grounds for all types of infections.
I know those precautions sound trite. But they are still the best protection from contracting the COVID-19 or any flu virus. That is what the news media should be doing: Educating the public instead of stirring up frenzied hysteria. Fearmongers, not a virus, are the biggest threat to America.
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