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Another unfortunate lesson: Publicly reporting the swine flu outbreak, and energetically pursuing measures to contain it, wound up costing Mexico about 0.3 percent of its $1 trillion GDP, largely in lost tourism income. Tourism has since started to recover, but Mexican officials say some sort of international fund to compensate countries for early reporting of new outbreaks is needed.
If not, "the next time, countries are going to say, 'no, this is going to affect our economy, it's better not to say anything,'" Ahued said.
Recalling the first days of the epidemic when hospitals were filling up with people on respirators, he said the public-health message -- avoid infection, and seek treatment early -- has percolated into the general population.
It often shows in small ways.
"Now, when you go to a restaurant or some other public place, almost all of them are giving out gel. When the waiter assigns you your table, they offer gel, or there is a bottle of gel at the door," Ahued notes. "There is an improvement in culture and education."
Franciso Santos, 28, followed the government's instructions but now feels deceived. He wore a disposable surgical mask to work as a systems engineer every day at the height of the outbreak, but such masks have since been found to be useless in protecting uninfected people, and may even expose them to greater risk.
Guadalupe Soto Estrada, an epidemiologist at the National University's Department of Public Health, explained that using disposable masks "is sometimes worse, because people take them off and on and touch them, so it is likely the micro-organisms on the mask will be passed onto whatever surface they come in contact with."
Authorities now only recommend masks for infected people, who should probably avoid going out in public anyway.
"I hope next time they (authorities) act with more information and more caution," Santos said. "They alarmed people. ... There was a lot of economic and psychological damage."
Ultimately, Mexico, like most countries, probably will never be able to build enough hospitals to deal with a highly lethal and contagious flu. But in 2009, authorities discovered the answer was to stop people from flooding into hospitals -- and potentially collapsing the health care system -- by instructing primary-care physicians to give anti-viral medication to anyone who showed multiple flu symptoms, even before any tests were run on them.
The World Health Organization says the virus has now spread to 213 countries, virtually every corner of the globe -- proving the disease could not be contained even by banning flights or product imports from Mexico, or quarantining travelers who had passed through here, something several countries did early in the 2009 pandemic. The disease spread anyway.
"This is something we really do not want to see done the next time there is this type of pandemic," Lezana says.
[Associated
Press;
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