美國是太不重視了
Local swine flu deaths jump to 11
By TODD ACKERMAN and CINDY GEORGE Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle
Oct. 13, 2009, 12:01AM
In what experts suggested should awaken people to the threat, swine
flu has been the cause of death in nine more people in the Houston area
than previously reported, according to new data from state and local
health departments.
The additional H1N1
deaths, which increase the area's total from two to 11, include six in
Harris County, two in Fort Bend County and one in Brazoria County. The
11 victims represent all age groups.
「It's truly
alarming that there are this many deaths this early,」 Dr. Paul Glezen,
lead epidemiologist at Baylor College of Medicine's Influenza Research
Center. 「Polls show people are blase and unconcerned, but this should
give them an idea of the virus' lethal nature.」
The confirmations
came as Harris County, like the rest of the nation, awaits distribution
of the vaccine that can prevent the disease. The vaccine began
trickling in last week, but only to health departments and not in
sufficient amounts to give to anyone beyond caregivers. That had not
changed Monday.
The eight deaths in
Harris County — the original two occurred in Houston — are still less
than some other large counties and comparable to Texas' other urban
counties. There have been 33 deaths in Los Angeles County, 24 in Dade
(Miami), 9 in Bexar (San Antonio) and 8 in both Dallas and Philadelphia
counties.
Glezen said he
thinks the actual local death toll is higher than 11, given deaths that
he knows of at Texas Children's Hospital. Baylor staffs Texas
Children's.
A Texas Children's
spokesman said one death in September has been confirmed to have been
caused by swine flu, two more are listed as probable swine flu deaths
and all three involved underlying medical conditions. It was unclear if
the one confirmed death was one of the Fort Bend deaths, an infant with
a severe congenital abnormality who died in mid-September.
The other two
pediatric deaths in the local 11 were the Mexico City toddler who died
at Texas Children's in April after being transferred from Brownsville;
and a Fort Bend middle school girl who died in May. The state still
counts the death of the Mexico City child as a Houston death, even
though city health department officials do not.
4 reported last week
The other
Houston-area deaths all involved adults — five in the 25- to
49-year-old age group, one in the 50- to 64-year-old group, one over 65
and one whose exact age category was not disclosed.
The new deaths only
came to light through a weekly state report that breaks down the number
by county. Four of the Harris County deaths were only reported to the
health department last week, but the other two occurred in June.
The health
department did not announce the deaths in June and last week, and has
no plans to announce them in the future, said spokeswoman Rita Obey.
「We don't normally
report influenza deaths,」 Obey said. 「Sadly, we know we're going to
have deaths. What we really want everyone to do is focus on how they
can protect themselves — the hygiene messages in addition to the
vaccine … and not become overly alarmed by the deaths.」
Obey added that privacy laws prevent releasing whether the patients had underlying health conditions or where they were treated.
Brazoria County
health department medical director Dr. Leo O'Gormon said they have no
record of a person dying in Brazoria County from H1N1, but a state
official stood by the state data, saying the death occurred in
September. He would say only that it was an adult.
Neither the state
nor city of Houston count the number of swine flu cases any more, but
their amount of activity is categorized as widespread, the highest
level. Glezen and another Baylor doctor said children with the virus
are in hospitals and clinics at alarming levels.
todd.ackerman@chron.com
cindy.george@chron.com