If It Happened There: Traditional Beliefs and Distrust of Authority Fueling Disease Outbreak - Slate http://www.slate.com/blogs... - how the media would cover the measles outbreak if it were in a foreign country
"Battling the country’s worst measles outbreak in years, medical professionals say that many Americans’ fears about Western medicine and distrust of the government are making it harder to combat the disease."
- Victor Ganata
"Despite funding cuts that have impacted the country’s byzantine and often insufficient health care infrastructure, vaccines against measles and other diseases are widely available. But in most regions of the country, they are optional, and many parents—under the influence of celebrities, political ideologues, and radical clerics—choose not to have their children vaccinated, due to the mistaken belief that the vaccines are dangerous."
- Victor Ganata
"As a result, this prosperous nation now has a lower vaccination rate than Zimbabwe."
- Victor Ganata
"As in northern Nigeria and northwestern Pakistan, some American vaccine resisters are religious extremists. But many are educated, middle-class secularists under the influence of dubious health fads. Political scientists also say that years of war, social disruption, and political scandal have left many Americans highly distrustful of authority, whether represented by the government, the media, or health workers."
- Victor Ganata
"While the nation’s health ministry and its embattled president have urged parents to have their children vaccinated, the message has been undermined by other prominent politicians."
- Victor Ganata
"This week two potential presidential candidates—the strongman chief executive of a northeastern industrial state and a charismatic anti-government physician from the central agricultural region—expressed support for the right of parents not to have their children vaccinated. Both are members of a party known for its resistance to Western science."
- Victor Ganata
"Researchers caution that the entrenched beliefs of a mistrustful population could take years for medical workers to overcome, meaning that more outbreaks could occur or even spread to other countries in the region, most of which have higher vaccination rates than the United States. Cases linked to the current outbreak have already been detected in neighboring Mexico."
- Victor Ganata
"Despite setbacks, U.S. health authorities insist they have the outbreak under control and there have not yet been calls for international assistance or military intervention."
- Victor Ganata