CHECK IT OUT
In a world vulnerable to AIDS, anthrax and other natural and man-made
threats, can public health systems protect the planet? Is Orange County
any better prepared to combat a major epidemic than less affluent
communities in Third World countries?
Pulitzer Prizewinning medical journalist Laurie Garrett first
addressed these topics in 1995’s “The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging
Diseases in a World Out of Balance.” Pointing to exploding populations,
collapsing ecologies and careless antibiotic use, Garrett concludes that
humanity is sitting on a powder keg of disease.
The Newsday science writer will talk about her books and theories
later this month at Newport Beach Central Library in the second program
of the 5th annual Martin W. Witte Distinguished Speakers Lecture Series.
Many of her works are available at the library.
In “The Coming Plague,” Garrett implicates contaminated water
supplies, prostitution, recirculated air, global warming and shortsighted
politicians for disease’s rampant spread.
“While the human race battles itself . . . the advantage moves to the
microbes’ court,” she warns. “They are our predators and they will be
victorious if we . . . do not learn how to live in a rational global
village that affords the microbes few opportunities.”
Beneath conclusions based on interviews with experts in virology,
disease ecology and medicine -- plus extensive field research -- there’s
a note of hope. It’s within mankind’s power to control many amplifiers of
disease, and this is the challenge for those who work to protect
populations around the globe, she says.Garrett followed her pioneering
work of investigative journalism with “Betrayal of Trust: The Collapse of
Global Public Health,” recently published in paperback. Focusing on
public health rather than medical technology, she exposes shocking
weaknesses in medical systems unprepared to deal with major epidemics.
Noting that more than 100,000 Americans die annually from infections
caught in hospitals, Garrett argues that medical cures using expensive
technology have been emphasized to the detriment of protecting human
health. In a world in which the health of individual nations depends on
the health of all, she calls for a global approach to insuring
humankind’s well-being.
Garrett can be seen on five videotapes in the “Great Minds of
Medicine” series, interviewing experts in emergency medicine, heart
disease, cancer, depression and infectious diseases. In the latter, she
taps into the insights of Dr. Karl Johnson, head of the Center for
Disease Control team that named the Ebola virus.
A limited number of tickets are still available for Newport Beach
lecture programs at 7 p.m. March 15 and at 2 p.m March 16. Tickets are
$55 for March 15, including dinner and live music, and $18 for March 16, including light refreshments.
Brochures with order forms are available at all Newport Beach Public
Libraries. For more information, call (800) 200-7094, or visit o7
www.newportbeachlibrary.orgf7 to reserve online.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Steven Short. All titles may be reserved from home or office computers by
accessing the catalog at www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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