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SARS Outbreak: Anatomy of an Epidemic (March 28, 2003, Two)

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Program Summary

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) is a new, potentially lethal disease that popped up in Guangdong Province, China, in November of 2002. Already an epidemic in China and Hong Kong, where nearly 1,500 cases and 50 deaths have occurred as of April 1, 2003, the flu-like disease caught the attention of the world when illnesses and deaths in Singapore, Vietnam, and Canada were reported earlier this year. As of late March,more than 60 cases have been diagnosed in the U.S., and epidemiologists worry that SARS could become a pandemic (global epidemic) unless swift, strict controls are initiated and treatments developed.

Scientists currently believe that a coronavirus (so called because the virus looks like it’s wearing a halo) causes SARS. Coronaviruses are responsible for the common cold in humans, but the SARS virus is a previously unknown version. Unlike bacterial diseases, which can be cured with antibiotics, viruses can’t be killed with medicine. Symptoms can be treated, but ultimately the body must produce antibodies to the virus that will overwhelm it. Ira’s guest, Dr. Klaus Stohr of the World Health Organization, is optimistic that SARS will not spread widely; secondary and tertiary (second and third generation) cases of SARS have been milder, and those patients have recovered faster, indicating that the virus may weaken in transmission. Many countries have taken immediate action to prevent the virus’ spread by screening travelers returning from Asia at international airports.


Guests

Klaus Stohr, manager of the Influenza Program of the World Health Organization in
Geneva, Switzerland


Related Links and Resources

World Health Organization: Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
Centers for Disease Control: Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
CNN.com, March 25, 2003:“Virus Outbreak: Air Travel Fears
CNN.com, March 29, 2003:“CDC: Mystery Illness Spreads More Easily Than First Thought
CNN.com, March 30, 2003:“Scared of New Virus? Wash Your Hands

For Discussion:


Activities

I get it! Understanding: Viruses at DiscoverySchool.com is an excellent lesson that accompanies the video of the same name. The video explores the nature of viruses and their negative and positive aspects. Included are thoughtful research and discussion topics (such as comparing the work of Edward Jenner and Jonas Salk), vocabulary, and extension activities that address language arts standards. Printed and on-line resources are listed.

I don’t want it, you can have it.EPIDEMIC! A Fred Friendly Seminar: The Natural History Perspective, a joint PBS and Museum project, is a text-only version that can help students get organized before they visit the on-line exhibit.

Cleanliness is next to godliness. At Learning Adventures in Citizenship: Fight for Reform (PBSKids.org), the effects of poverty and overcrowding on public health are examined in this series on the history of New York City. Students become epidemiologists on the Learning Adventures in Citizenship: Epidemic! page, tracking illnesses that have passed through their school. The Lesson Plan provides discussion topics and a worksheet for tracking the illness.

The furious flu. Influenza 1918 was part of Public Broadcasting System’s American Experience series, available on video. This episode recounts the story of the 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic and its impact on the United States. Though great strides had been made in the field of vaccines, Spanish influenza was the SARS of that era—baffling, contagious, and deadly, killing 675,000 people in America alone. Timelines, maps, charts, and personal stories sketch the difficulty the government had in dealing with the disease. The teacher’s guide provides discussion questions and research topics. Students can compare and contrast the influenza pandemic with more modern outbreaks of diseases such as polio, hantavirus, or ebola.

Don’t sneeze on me! Thirteen Ed Online: Ah Choo!, a teachers’ guide, uses the Internet to expose students to global epidemiology. A role-playing activity makes the problem of tracking an epidemic more real. Fizzies virus, another lesson plan, is a classroom activity that demonstrates how diseases are spread.

Eye of newt. Home remedies have been used throughout the ages to treat all sorts of ailments. Sometimes they worked, sometimes they didn’t. Have students research the medieval European plague, Victorian cholera outbreaks, and other historical epidemics with more modern ones to assess the differences in popular attitudes towards the illnesses, the variety of treatments and their effectiveness, and methods used to avoid contagion.

Use the search box below to perform a Google search within any of the specifc sites or general domains mentioned in this Activities section.

Specific sites:

Search school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/
Search www.pbs.org/fredfriendly/epidemic/perspective/
Search www.pbs.org/wnet/newyork/laic/episode4/topic5/
Search www.pbs.org/wnet/newyork/laic/episode4/activity5/
Search www.pbs.org/wnet/newyork/laic/lessons/
Search www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/influenza/
Search www.thirteen.org/edonline/lessons/achoo/
Search www.kidzone.ws/plans/


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