WHO Learns Powerful Lesson In Indonesia & Black Magic
May 28, 2006 by admin
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
The recent deaths of seven people in an Indonesian village has taught the WHO a powerful lesson; understanding the importance of early communication and education.
At the same time, many villagers have become convinced that the fatalities were not from the bird flu. “They are convinced black magic is at work, that ghosts now haunt their quiet Christian community of about 1,500 people.”
As their neighbors started dying, confusion and mistrust prompted villagers to stop cooperating with officials. Many refused to give blood samples, fearing they would later fall ill and suffer the fate of their neighbors.
The case has been a powerful lesson for WHO officials in understanding the importance of early communication and education.
“We’re seeing what problems we’re going to run into on the ground,” WHO spokesman Dick Thompson said. “We’re learning with every step.”
Jules Pieters, manager of WHO’s rapid response and containment group in Geneva, said it is clear that people familiar with the culture, language and customs of this area should have been involved earlier to help villagers understand what was happening, how to protect themselves and the importance of allowing treatment if they develop symptoms.
Some neighbors insist, however, that bird flu is not to blame. They are convinced black magic is at work, that ghosts now haunt their quiet Christian community of about 1,500 people.
Many are too scared to even pass by the family’s houses, and some who live nearby are awakened by nightmares that they will be the next to die.
“We are so afraid just to step into that house,” said a 37-year-old woman who identified herself only as Sembining. “We can’t tell what we’re afraid of — we’re just afraid.”
She lived near the victims and said the first woman who died was like a daughter to her. She recalled feeding and caring for her friend as she lay burning with fever before bird flu was ever suspected. Sembining can’t understand why she, too, didn’t fall ill.
“I think the family was cursed,” she said. “It must be, because if it’s bird flu, why only their family? Their blood?”
This is the largest cluster in a handful of cases involving bird flu passing from human to human, but scientists think it has always done so between blood relatives — not spouses. That has led some to theorize there may be a genetic susceptibility to the disease, but there is no evidence yet to support that.
Tests found no trace of the H5N1 virus in the village’s poultry, and dozens of hens, roosters and chicks run freely in backyards. Pigs, cows, buffalo, dogs and barefoot children roam along the rutted road and across fields of chilies, oranges and limes.














