"I
Survived Swine Flu" Facebook Group Transcends Borders
Joel
Leyden
Israel News Agency
Tel Aviv ----
November 12, 2009 ..... For me, Swine Flu arrived in the shape
of an email back in May.
A well respected, global advertising firm in Switzerland was given
my name as an authority on Internet PR, viral marketing and Web
2.0. They asked if I would advertise through digital PR a software
widget that they had created to inform millions worldwide
as to the threat of something called Swine Flu.
Before creating
a massive advertising campaign, first I needed to do some research.
What I found was both interesting and frightening. I knew that
Swine Flu or H1N1 was out there somewhere and that it was very
mild. I also knew that it was going to go away, fade, sleep, go
on vacation and then come back with a vengeance in the late Fall.
I knew that Swine Flu had killed between 50 to 100 million people
during the 1918 flu pandemic and experts were bracing for a similar
attack. The drug companies started to work on vaccines that they
promised would be ready by October.
Throughout
the entire summer of 2009, I knew that Planet Earth was going
to be hit by something bad and that only a few hundred medical
professionals knew this as well. I felt as though I was walking
around with a dark secret.
Fast forward,
I am reading reports of Swine Flu spreading rapidly throughout
Europe and North America during the first week in November as
my 9-year-old daughter sneezes on me. I looked at this precious,
beautiful little girl and said to myself: "what has this
little monster done?"
Sure enough,
two days later I am at the family doctor with all of the symptoms
of flu.
"So doctor,
do I have Swine Flu," I asked. "Joel, 98 percent of
everyone who is sick has Swine Flu," he replied as if I was
talking about having just scratched myself. "So you think
I have Swine Flu?" The doctor smiled and said: "everybody
has it, you just need to rest, eat right and take aspirin for
your fever."
He seemed
almost oblivious to the fact that this was going to kill me. I
thought to myself that maybe he has Swine Flu and is not responding
all that well.
"Did
you get it?," I inquired. "Yeah, about a week ago."
Now I started
to feel like a film extra in the movie Village of the Damned.
Everybody got it but nobody is taking about it.
After exhausting
about a dozen boxes of tissues, 24 bottles of mineral water, 14
blue cold medicine tablets and passing this disease unto my two
unsuspecting cats, (yes, people are passing it to cats) the fever
started to break. But now a female friend of mine started to cough,
sneeze and complain that she was extremely weak. Again, back at
the doctor and again he stated that there was no need for a blood
test, she has Swine Flu.
After a few
days had passed, her physical state really deteriorated. Tonight
she is lying in a hospital bed with double pneumonia. Doctors
at the hospital told me that half the people in the emergency
room had Swine Flu. Most of them were middle aged or older. Everyone
was wearing white masks except for me. I mean, what was going
to happen to me in the emergency room - no one was going to give
it to me or me give it to them. I became curious as to how much
money the surgical mask people are now making?
Today, the
CDC - Center for Disease Control
in Atlanta, announced that Swine flu has sickened about 22 million
Americans since April and killed nearly 4,000, including 540 children.
"I am
expecting all of these numbers, unfortunately, to continue to
rise," said Dr. Anne Schuchat of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. "We have a long flu season ahead
of us."
During week
43, 14,151 specimens were tested for influenza of any type and
that 5,258 (37.2%) tested positive for influenza. Of the specimens
tested, 14 were influenza B. The remaining 5.244 were influenza
A; 4 were seasonal influenza A, 2 each of H3 and H1; 41 were unable
to be subtyped, 1,310 did not have sub typing performed, and the
remaining 3,889 - 74.2 percent - were all confirmed A 2009 H1N1.
The number
of deaths reported due to Pneumonia and Influenza (P&I) were
well above epidemic levels, as it had been for four weeks previously.
In Israel
three more Israelis have died of swine flu today, bringing the
total number of deaths from the virus to 45.
Those who
had died matched the profile for those most at risk - having contracted
Swine Flu with an existing chronic disease.
The profile
emerging is of a distinctive virus. Although seasonal flu tends
to infect just the cells high in the upper airway, H1N1 penetrates
down into the terminal air sacs called alveoli. "This is
not an area of the lung where you would usually see seasonal flu,"
Zaki says. He has seen such behavior before, though in
the few samples of lung tissue he has examined from humans killed
by the H5N1 avian flu virus. But the virus is much more prevalent
in the tissues from the severe H1N1 cases he has examined
"like avian flu on steroids" as Zaki puts it.
It's scary.
And no one wants anyone to panic. Doctors say that Swine Flu in
it's present form is mild. I would say from personal experience
that the reality would be somewhere between mild to moderate.
If you have a chronic disease or your immune system is weak, it
can kill you.
I originally
opened a Facebook
group entitled: "I Survived Swine Flu" as comic
relief that would provide for a few smiles to the many who are
or who have suffered from it. But now as I again witness the severe
seriousness of this disease, I invite doctors, nurses and health
care professionals to join this Facebook group to provide the
latest news, facts and advice.
One poster
on the Facebook group "I Survived Swine Flu" group said:
"hey, joel: spent almost two days YEARNING for death . .
. . . couldn't remember the names of the children who were talking
to me . . . seemed to recall once being married . . . on the other
side of the worst but still weak and hacking up a storm. this
flu is the MOTHER of ALL influenzas!"
Yes we need
to smile. We need to have hope. We need to support each other
as we go through this dreadful disease.
But most of
all we need to let those who are now suffering know that there
is light at the end of the tunnel. You will ache, sweat from high
fever, use much toilet paper, cough and sneeze, but Facebook and
social networking is there for you to communicate, chat, post
photos and videos in real time with others who are either also
suffering or have suffered and have lived to tell their story.
As we isolate
ourselves to the confines of our warm homes and our soft beds,
it's reassuring to know that with the touch of a button one can
be on-line chatting with others from New York, London, Paris,
Tel Aviv, Moscow, Damascus, Beirut, Montreal, Amman, Baghdad or
Tokyo sharing the pain and the smiles to pass the time.
And who knows,
Swine Flu just might eliminate some physical, racial, religious
and emotional borders as Jews, Christians, Muslims, liberals and
conservatives who come from very different political and ethnic
backgrounds come together on Facebook and Twitter to find a warm
and common thread through a disease whose original intent was
to kill and destroy.
Pass the tea,
the tissues, the jokes and reload that Microsoft or Firefox browser.