People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
28 July 12, 2009 |
Influenza
Pandemic In A Globalised World
Amit
Sen Gupta
ON June 11,
2009 the World Health Organisation (WHO) raised the worldwide pandemic
alert
level to Phase 6 in response to the ongoing global spread of the novel
influenza A (H1N1) virus. A Phase 6 designation indicates that a global
pandemic is underway. A pandemic means an epidemic that spreads in
different
parts of the globe.
More than 70 countries are now
reporting cases of
human infection with novel H1N1 flu. This number has been increasing
over the
past few weeks, but many of the earlier cases reportedly had links to
travel or
were localised outbreaks without community spread. The WHO designation
of a
pandemic alert Phase 6 reflects the fact that there are now ongoing
community
level outbreaks in multiple parts of world. There have been widespread
speculation in the lay press regarding the possible consequences of the
pandemic. Raising of the alert level to Phase 6 � the highest level of
alert �
have further fuelled fears of an impending global health emergency.
We, clearly, have a full-scale
pandemic on our
hands and the stage of containment is fast running out. The
A PANDEMIC
�WAITING TO HAPPEN�?
While
designated as �swine� flu by the global media, there is still no
clarity
regarding the origin of the new influenza virus. In fact, the
Paris-based World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) has expended
considerable energy trying to keep people from calling the virus 'swine
flu'.
The OIE's quite legitimate concern is that this nomenclature might
adversely
affect trade, with countries taking unnecessary measures such as
culling herds,
or invoking trade bans on pigs and pork. What we do know is that the
present
flu virus will not spread through consumption of pork. But the genetic
evidence
does point to the possibility that the present strain is a reassorted
swine
influenza virus, which has acquired genetic material from strains
affecting
birds and humans, and has jumped from pigs to humans (Nature 459, 889, June 18, 2009).
The �swine flu� scare
has a long history. In 1998 an
extremely
virulent variant of the virus was reported, which killed thousands of
pigs in a
farm in
While it is virtually impossible to
accurately predict
when a virus will �jump species�, i.e. change from one capable of only
infecting animals to one that can infect and spread among humans, we do
know
that the swine population is a reservoir of viruses that can mutate and
afflict
humans. Two of the great influenza pandemics in recent history � in
1957 and in
1968 � are believed to have originated from the mixing of bird and
human
viruses inside pigs.
Viruses have been known to jump species for
long. What
is however of interest and concern is the fact that there appears to be
an acceleration
of the process in recent times. The swine flu epidemic comes close on
the heels
of the avian flu scare a few years back. Not just influenza viruses �
new
virulent strains of viruses capable of causing other disease in humans
have
been emerging with disconcerting regularity in the past decades.
AGRIBUSINESS�
MICROBE
FACTORIES
To understand why this is happening, we would
need to
understand what factors influence the emergence of new strains of
viruses.
Random mutations take place constantly in nature. However almost all
such
mutations do not result in a new variant that is able to sustain itself
in a
population of animals (or humans). Environments where viruses have
access to
large animal populations living in close proximity are known to be the
best
breeding grounds for new strains of viruses. Such environments provide
viruses
with the two basic ingredients required to thrive and spread � a large
number
of hosts in which to grow and multiply, and other hosts to which they
can
migrate.
It is from such a pool of genetic mixing that
a virus
capable of causing pandemics emerges. While known strains of influenza
affect
millions of humans every year, they do not cause serious symptoms in
most and
do not spread very fast. This is because after a virus has established
itself
in a human population over a period of time, most people develop some
levels of
immunity to the virus. As a consequence most people do not get the
disease even
when infected, or only develop mild symptoms. The people who get very
sick are
usually those who are already vulnerable � children, old people, those
with other
underlying diseases, etc. On the other hand when a new virus starts
spreading,
the entire population has little or no immunity. So the disease spreads
rapidly
and causes more severe symptoms.
In the past such conditions existed within
the environment
of intensive agriculture in
It is not just the large number of animals
being in
close proximity that promotes breeding of pathogens. These animals are
housed
in cramped quarters, have little scope for exercise, live in
suffocating heat
and surrounded by their excreta, have little contact with the outside
environment and made to breed among themselves. They are, thus, animals
with
weak immune systems that are perfect for the introduction of any new
pathogen.
Such farms are breeding grounds for exotic species of drug resistant
bacterial
and protozoal pathogens as well, fuelled by the widespread and
indiscriminate
use of antibiotics in the captive animals.
Clearly there is a need for much larger
scrutiny of
the conditions in which animals are reared in corporate run farms. At
present,
for example, there is no requirement that the authorities be notified
of flu in pigs, as the animals generally recover, and farmers have
little
incentive to report an outbreak in their herds given the potential
repercussions. More advanced forms of co-operation are required to
examine the
interface between human and animal health. Corporations need to be
reined in so
that their hunger for super profits do not come at the expense of human
health
at a global level.
PANDEMIC
PREPAREDNESS
IN AN
UNEQUAL WORLD
Let
us now turn to the global response to the pandemic. One lesson stands
out loud
and clear. Present methods of containing a pandemic are ineffective and
perhaps
useless. This is linked to the fact that surveillance systems for
monitoring
the spread of infections are deeply embedded in the public health
systems. In
many parts of the world, public health systems are in a state of
disarray and
ill equipped to mount any meaningful surveillance.
After the Avian Flu scare in the late 1990s
the WHO has
tried to promote a strategy of identification and isolation of a
pandemic
strain within its local radius of outbreak. This strategy has clearly
floundered in the face of the present epidemic. We can see clearly that
public
systems in many parts are incapable of monitoring outbreaks that can
spread
fast (like the present one). Moreover, there doesn�t exist any
effective
mechanisms to monitor and contain the spread of epidemics from the
reservoirs
of such epidemics created by agribusiness. To do so would require
enormous
political will by countries such as the
As health authorities move on to the next
step towards
addressing the public health effects of the epidemic, the focus shifts
towards
drugs and vaccines. Predictably, the inequity prevalent in the globe is
starting to be played out again in the globe. On one hand, the Swiss
multinational Roche, is trying its best to make a killing from the
patent that
it holds over Tamiflu � the only known medicine that can ameliorate the
symptoms of the disease (though it cannot cure or prevent it entirely).
Interestingly, Tamiflu is not even an original Roche innovation � the
Patent
was bought over by Roche from a smaller company! Indian generic
companies like
Cipla are in a position to produce Tamiflu, but Roche will now try to
prevent
these from being sold in markets where Roche holds a patent.
Fortunately, there
is no Tamiflu patent in
The
same North-South divide is being played out in the case of vaccine
development
as well. It is widely anticipated that an effective vaccine will be
available
by the coming winter. It is also clear that vaccine manufacturers will
not be
able to produce enough vaccines to supply to all populations in the
globe. The
WHO estimates drug companies will be able to produce between one
billion and
two billion doses of vaccine a year for a pandemic ��� far short of the
world's
population of 6.8 billion also given that two doses of the vaccine are
likely
to be required for every person. So we already have unsavoury deals
being
struck by rich countries in the
Further, since some time, there has been a
global
consensus on the need to have transparent methods by which countries
share
information about viruses that they collect from different regions in
order to
do research on the pathogens and also to produce vaccines (under the
rubric of
what are called: �virus sharing agreements� or �Material Transfer
Agreements�.)
In the past few months the
WAITING FOR
THE
NEXT
PANDEMIC?
While the present pandemic is a real public
health
emergency, it is also necessary not to fall prey to �scare mongering�.
What we
know about the present epidemic indicates that at present the virus,
though
highly infective, does not generally cause very severe symptoms � it
has been labeled
as �moderate� in its ability to cause morbidity or mortality in humans.
Also,
to put the numbers of deaths and infected patients being reported at
present in
perspective, it should be understood that 36,000 people die in the