posted on Aug, 14 2008 @ 01:44 AM
I am in the US military and ran upon something curious this morning. I was in the post CTMC (Consolidated Troop Medical Clinic) for a few hours
getting a physical to make sure I'm still healthy enough to jump out of a perfectly good airplane. As with all things relating to the military, it
included a lot of waiting, during which I entertained myself with an excellent Olympic womens' volleyball match between China and Cuba and with the
various informative pamphlets in the facility.
As with most medical facilities the pamphlets were focused on the mundane: tobacco, alcohol, and drug abuse, post traumatic stress disorder, STDs, and
the like. One stood out as odd, featuring a group of soldiers in uniform wearing surgical masks on the cover. The title was "Pandemic Flu."
The first few pages were dedicated to a history of pandemic flu, the outbreaks over the past century and what makes a flu outbreak "pandemic." It
also gave a summery of the H5N1 virus, citing bird to human infection, mortality rates, and potential for mutation into a contagious virus.
As for the last few pages, I unfortunately got called away. I have to go back on Friday, so I will grab a copy of my own. It was a guide on how to
deal with a pandemic flu outbreak, but I don't know the exact content. I will edit this post when I do.
This pamphlet struck me as odd. Pandemic flu doesn't seem to be a big concern in the mainstream. Why are military personnel being indirectly warned
about a potential epidemic of a virus that has largely been marginalized?