THROW OUT THE PLAYBOOK: A NEW PLAN ARRIVES
by Dr. Sherri Tenpenny, DO
September 28, 2005
Every winter, it is reported that millions of people in the
world get the flu. Coworkers and classmates are home, sick and
miserable, for about a week. A few — mostly the elderly and
infirm — die. We’re told the annual death toll exceeds 36,000
in the United States and a few hundred thousand around the
globe. This computer-generated number has gaping holes in its
credibility, however, because medical authorities don't
separate and verify those who actually died of influenza from
those who died of a "flu-like illness” or of
flu-complications, such as pneumonia. [1]
As a general rule, people think of the flu season as a
nuisance. Even major controversies — like last year’s
contaminated vaccine supply that cut the number of doses by 50
percent — barely made a blip on the radar screen. For a few
weeks, the media hyped the shortages with images of people
standing in line to be vaccinated. But by January, a vaccine
shortage turned into a vaccine glut. Authorities abandoned the
rationing and started to urge everyone once again to get in
line. After all that hoopla, we ended up with a very mild flu
season.
In addition, the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention) has a media plan in place. Referred to as a
“Seven-Step Recipe for Generating Interest in, and Demand for,
Flu (or any other) Vaccination,” it was engineered to ensure
the economic success of the season’s flu vaccine campaign. The
program is designed to methodically manipulate the general
public through the use of major media (newswires, television).
The scheduled, fear-based messages are aimed at convincing the
unsuspecting public that not only is the flu shot necessary,
but people should be demanding it. This results in millions of
dollars of free advertising for vaccine manufacturers. [2]
The “recipe” is ramping up all over again with the approach of
fall: The annual flu vaccine push is about to begin. “Make a
plan, then work the plan,” comes to mind. But the plan may be
wearing thin. The general public has come to understand that
the flu isn’t a catastrophic illness. Like the sparrows to
Capistrano, it arrives at about the same time every year. Most
people are showing the same ho-hum attitude to the frenzied
reports of the avian flu virus, H5N1, also referred to as
“bird flu.”
Predictably, officials don’t like it one bit. They are finding
it difficult to get people really worried about avian
influenza no matter how many articles of “catastrophic
concern” they have published. But this time, they need to walk
a tight line. They saw the economic consequences caused by
“epidemic hype” in 2003, when the world was focused on the
SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) outbreak.
The SARS virus was thought to spread from humans after
infected animals were sold and slaughtered in unsanitary and
crowded markets in China's Guangdong province. Over a period
of five months, 8,049 people were reported to be infected by
what turned out to be a novel human coronavirus. The vast
majority of those (7,248) were in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
Even though there were 774 deaths, or close to 10 percent of
known cases, SARS didn’t become “the new pandemic,” killing
millions as feared. [3]
The SARS experience, however, taught officials a critically
important lesson about overestimating the staying power of an
infection. The economic impact on the Asia-Pacific region of
the six-month SARS outbreak was nearly $40 billion.
In Canada, 251 people were infected and 43 died. [4] The
Canadian Tourism Board estimated that the epidemic cost the
nation's economy $419 million. The Ontario health minister
estimated that the cost to the province's health-care system,
including money spent on special SARS clinics and supplies to
protect healthcare workers, was about $763 million. That’s
more than $1.18 billion spent on one disease during one season
in just one country.
The SARS outbreak also had a substantial impact on the global
airline industry. Flights to Asia and the Pacific Rim
decreased by 45 percent and the number of flights between Hong
Kong and the United States fell 69 percent. [5]
Undeniably, there is a genuine downside to issuing warnings
that turn out to be unnecessary hype. Unfortunately, the way
that the H5N1 avian flu infection is being handled is starting
to inflict a similar economic impact. Since 2003, more than
160 million domestic ducks, chickens and geese have been
killed in eight countries. The cost to various local economies
is already estimated in the tens of millions. And based on
information freely available on the Internet, bird flu is
predicted to cause the “Great Global Depression,” 40 percent
of the world’s population to be infected, an unimaginable
number of deaths and, in Western civilization, “the end of
life, as we know it.” [6], [7]
But, if the apocalypse is coming, the general public does not
seem overly concerned. The old playbook isn’t working this
time. No one seems to be paying much attention to the
scenarios being portrayed by the CDC and the World Health
Organization (WHO). Officials need a new plan.
Enter risk communication.
The field of risk communication is relatively new. Dating from
the early 1980s, it evolved from several different fields of
study: health education, public relations, psychology, risk
perception and risk assessment. The CDC needed a new plan to
get people to take bird flu seriously and to move government
health officials to earmark massive amounts of money for the
planning process.
A new 10-step “recipe” crafted by risk communication experts,
Peter M. Sandman, Ph.D., and Jody Lanard, MD, based in
Princeton, New Jersey, has arrived on the scene. Their plan
will serve to guide people through serious hazards when they
are appropriately upset (or even in denial). [8]
Here’s the “new and improved” version of the “Seven-Step
Recipe” for the flu shot:
Step 1: Start where your
audience is
Fair enough. For most educational processes, this is a good
place to begin. Officials are advised to start with empathy.
Instead of “berating” people for their lack of concern
about bird flu, make “common cause with the public” …
and then talk about how “horrific the next flu pandemic may
be compared with the annual flu.” Don’t tell them the
answer; lead them to the conclusion.
Step 2: Don’t be afraid to
frighten people
That’s right, the new plan advocates the use of fear. “Fear
appeals have had bad press, but the research evidence that
they work is overwhelming…. We can't scare people enough about
H5N1. WHO has been trying for over a year, with
evermore-dramatic appeals to the media, the public and member
states.”
This is the reason the “same old recipe” isn’t working: fear
is an over-played card. At every turn is a doomsday message
about something coming from the CDC and the WHO. The “Chicken
Little” approach has played itself out, even though the press
and the government seem to push that same button over and over
again.
Step 3: Acknowledge
uncertainty
Uncertainty is the name of the game — and it is the very
uncertainty of this infection that feeds the fear. The plan
encourages officials to admit, “There is so much that we don’t
know about H5N1.”
In spite of encouraging uncertainty, there has been a
noticeable change in the language surrounding the arrival of
the pandemic from “if the pandemic comes” to “when the
pandemic arrives.” [9]I suspect we may see more of this
“certainty” once the new pandemic vaccine becomes available
worldwide.
Step 4: Share dilemmas
In crisis communication, the goal of dilemma sharing is “to
humanize the organization” making the decision, “reducing
the outrage if you turn out to be wrong.” In addition,
this practice will let the public think that it is helping to
make decisions, leading to “better buy-in” of the decisions
being made.
I wonder if the farmers in Vietnam, China and Thailand are
feeling any sense of “dilemma sharing” when their birds —
infected or not — are confiscated by the government and
killed, leading to a complete loss of income and food
production for their families?
Step 5: Give people
something to do
In January 2005, Canadian infectious diseases expert Richard
Schabas told The Wall Street Journal, "Scaring people
about avian influenza accomplishes nothing because we're not
asking people to do anything about it." The authors of the new
playbook recommend that we start planning how to handle
catastrophic business disruptions. They even suggest
“cognitive and emotional rehearsal — learning about H5N1 and
thinking about what a pandemic might be like and how you’d
cope.”
Nearly every religious tradition and many researchers,
including Depak Chopra, Larry Dossey and Wayne Dyer, have
given us a clear message: “You get what you think about.”
Could global cognitive and emotional rehearsals make the
situation worse? Perhaps we should visualize, instead, a safe,
clean healthy world, free of viral illnesses for all, humans,
birds and animals.
Step 6: Be willing to
speculate — responsibly
Step 7: Don’t get caught
in the numbers game
Step 8: Stress magnitude
more than probability
Step 9: Guide the
adjustment reaction
All four of these steps serve to accentuate Step 2: Don’t be
afraid to frighten people. Get people revved up and worried.
Get them motivated to fear that the pandemic is coming.
Stockpile drugs, frantically push for vaccines, store water
and food. We didn’t see a disaster at the millennium, but one
is just around the corner. At any minute. Soon. We’re due.
Step 10: Inform the public
early and aim for total candor and transparency
The American government has collaborated with its many
agencies to hide so many things from its citizens — from
vaccine cover-ups about thimerosal to Vioxx — that it has lost
all sense of trustworthiness. Do government officials still
have the ability to be “transparent”?
Now that we have seen the new playbook, start watching for the
rhetoric. The bird flu vaccine to “protect” the public from
the H5N1 virus is more than a year away from release.
Nonetheless, watch for the 2005/06 “normal” flu season to be
the launching pad for a new form of information sharing called
“risk communication.” See the plays unfold, paving the way for
the arrival of a new “bird flu” shot. A global mass
vaccination program plan is about to unfold.
First published on RedFlagsDaily.com on September 12, 2005
REFERENCES:
1. “Annual number of flu deaths: It’s a guess”
2. The CDC’s full plan and commentary can be read in “The Flu
Season Campaign Begins”.
RedFlagsDaily.com
3. SARS fatalities. NationMaster.com
4. SARS fatalities. NationMaster.com
5. Preparing for the Next Pandemic by Michael T. Osterholm.
Foreign Affairs, July/August 2005.
www.foreignaffairs.org
6. Ibid. Osterholm. Also see:
7. The Next Pandemic? By Laurie Garrett. Foreign Affairs.
July/August 2005. www.foreignaffairs.org
8. Bird Flu: Communicating the Risks, by Peter Sandman and
Jody Lanard. Perspectives in Health, Vol 10, No 2. 2005.
9. Monto, A.S. The role of antivirals in the control of
influenza. Vaccine. 2003 May 1:21(16) 796-800 PMID: 12686097
Sherri J. Tenpenny, D.O. is the President and Medical
Director of OsteoMed II, a clinic located in the Cleveland
area that provides conventional, alternative, and preventive
medicine. OsteoMed II's staff of three osteopathic physicians,
two acupuncturists and a 10-member support team focuses on
four specialized areas: allergy elimination; treating acute
and chronic pain problems; all areas of woman's health; and
the treatment of vaccine injured children.
Dr. Tenpenny has lectured at Cleveland State University and
Case Western Reserve Medical School on topics related to
alternative health. Nationally, she is a regular guest on many
different radio and television talk shows, including "Your
Health" aired on the Family Network. She has published
articles in magazines, newspapers and internet sites,
including, Redflagsdaily.com,
Mercola.com and
Mothering.com. She has presented
at the National Vaccine Information Center's annual meeting
and at several international conferences on autism.
Dr. Tenpenny is respected as one of the country's most
knowledgeable and outspoken physicians regarding the impact of
vaccines on health. As a member of the prestigious National
Speaker's Association, Dr. Tenpenny is an outspoken advocate
for free choice in healthcare, including the right to refuse
vaccination. As an internationally known speaker, she is
highly sought after for her ability to present scientifically
sound information regarding vaccination hazard and warnings
that are rarely portrayed by conventional medicine. Most
importantly, she offers hope through her unique treatments
offered at OsteoMed II for those who have been
vaccine-injured.
Dr. Tenpenny is a graduate of the University of Toledo in
Toledo, Ohio. She received her medical training at Kirksville
College of Osteopathic Medicine in Kirksville, Missouri. Dr.
Tenpenny is Board Certified in Emergency Medicine and
Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine. Prior to her career in
alternative medicine, Dr. Tenpenny served as Director of the
Emergency Department at Blanchard Valley Regional Hospital
Center in Findlay, Ohio, from 1987 to 1995. In 1994, she and a
partner opened OsteoMed, a medical practice in Findlay limited
to the specialty of osteopathic manipulative medicine. In
1996, Dr. Tenpenny moved to Strongsville, Ohio, and founded
OsteoMed II, expanding her practice and her vision of
combining the best of conventional and alternative medicine.