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China Syndrome: The True Story of the 21st Century's First Great Epidemic [Hardcover]

Karl Taro Greenfeld (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 14, 2006
As the world braces for the next flu pandemic, the 2003 SARS outbreak now seems even more relevant as the harbinger of crises to come. The next great viral storm will likely emerge from Asia and could be more contagious than any respiratory disease since the catastrophic influenza of 1918. "China Syndrome," an intensely compelling and unrivaled exploration of the first epidemic of the twenty-first century, explores how globalization, coupled with rampant development, is ushering in a terrifying new chapter in the history of human health.

When SARS broke out in January 2003, Karl Taro Greenfeld was the editor of "Time Asia" in Hong Kong, just a few miles from the epicenter of the outbreak. After vague, initial reports of terrified Chinese emptying pharmacy shelves and boiling vinegar to "purify" the air in nearby Guangdong province, Greenfeld and his staff soon found themselves immersed in the story of a lifetime. His taut, scientific thriller, in the tradition of "The Hot Zone" and "The Great Influenza," takes readers on a gripping ride that blows through the Chinese government's effort to cover up the disease. Greenfeld deftly tracks this mysterious killer outbreak, from the bedside of one of the first Chinese victims to overwhelmed hospital wards crashing from the onslaught of cases, from cutting-edge labs where researchers struggle to identify the virus to the war rooms at the World Health Organization headquarters in Geneva.

Infectious diseases have reemerged as one of the globe's most pressing problems. In this thorough, revelatory account of SARS, Greenfeld gives us a crucial blueprint for how an epidemic evolves. "China Syndrome" will make you realize how lucky youare to be alive -- and wonder how long that good luck will hold.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Greenfeld's ground zero perspective on SARS—he was editing Time Asia when the first rumors of a virulent disease sweeping mainland Chinese hospitals hit his desk—brings reportorial immediacy to this chronicle of how epidemiologists realized that the cases of "atypical pneumonia" scattered throughout Asia were the initial wave of severe acute respiratory syndrome, a new strain of avian flu. Greenfeld's portraits present multiple angles on the story, such as a young man who falls sick after emigrating to the big city and a doctor who bravely volunteers to treat patients despite the huge risk of infection. The author also describes his own reactions while trying to keep his family and magazine staff safe in Hong Kong amid growing panic, and muses on how congested urban areas provide a perfect breeding ground for viruses. But he repeatedly returns to the most egregious factor in the disease's spread: the silence from (and outright suppression of information by) the Chinese government during the earliest stages of the epidemic. SARS could have been much worse, he warns, and we almost certainly will see its like again—and for all the heroic struggles to contain the danger, his final prognosis is not a happy one. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Former Time Asia editor Greenfeld was in China when evidence of a new flu appeared at the end of 2002 in the southern city Shenzhen, which had grown from a few thousand to seven million in 20 years, so fast that every one of the central government's development plans failed for lack of time to implement it.^B As China was enjoying a tremendous economic boom, accompanied by mass urbanization, during what is called the Era of Wild Flavor, Shenzhen was also on a wild ride. And there was perhaps no better example of the Era of Wild Flavor than the wild-animal markets that provided restaurateurs and adventurous diners with virtually every species from land, sea, and air. Greenfeld, whose magazine and Web site were off-limits to the Chinese populace, watched and reported on the spread of a highly infectious disease even as the Chinese government squelched, concealed, denied--and gave it the time and opportunity to escalate into a major pandemic. Greenfeld offers little hope that the Chinese have learned any lesson, for it's back to business-as-usual for Shenzhen's wild-animal trade, and he ponders the nature and purpose of viruses as he paints a rather gloomy picture of what we and the World Health Organization can expect next. Donna Chavez
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 464 pages
  • Publisher: Harper; First edition. edition (March 14, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060587229
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060587222
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.4 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,709,748 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gripping and Insightful, March 21, 2006
By 
Kat Bakhu (Albuquerque, NM United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: China Syndrome: The True Story of the 21st Century's First Great Epidemic (Hardcover)
There are a growing number of books coming out on the threat that viruses pose to the human population. China Syndrome is one of the latest, and it stands favorably with the best in the genre. It tells the story of the virus itself, the people who were struck down by it, and the people whose task was to track the virus down and stop it before it burned through a big part of human civilization.

Reading China Syndrome was like having a front row seat in watching how a deadly virus can claw a devastating toehold into our lives, leaving us defenseless as there is often nothing we can do about it. You learn about what makes a virus so deadly. But what is even more interesting in this account is the story of how big of a role government can play in either stopping the virus or allowing the virus to continue its destructive path.

In this case, the government was China's. It's amazing to learn of the officials incompetence, self-centeredness, and willful negligence to the Chinese and world populations at large, all to protect their own image. The arrogant incompetence of a few could have easily led to a great human catastrophe. If you are interested in the topic of threatening pandemics, then you surely should put China Syndrome on your must read list.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Richly Matter-of-Fact in Its Presentation, Profoundly Scary in Its Implications, December 11, 2006
By 
Steve Koss (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
I admit approaching Karl Greenfeld's CHINA SYNDROME with a certain degree of skepticism, not about the course of SARS or the research to discover its cause and source, but about the atmosphere created in China by the first great epidemic of the 21st Century. Writing from his Time Magazine base in Hong Kong, I wondered whether Mr. Greenfeld could really capture the various levels of uncertainty, disbelief, helplessness, fatalism, paranoia, and outright fear I experienced living and teaching in Suzhou (about 50 miles west of Shanghai) throughout the winter of 2002 and the spring and early summer of 2003.

Having now finished CHINA SYNDROME, I give the author a perfect 10 for his presentation of the scientific research associated with the hunt for the nature of SARS and its causative virus, a 9 for his detailed rendition of the SARS story at its epicenter in Guangdong Province and nearby Hong Kong, and an 8 for his discussion of SARS in Beijing and Shanxi Province. In each of these areas, Mr. Greenfeld does an outstanding job tracing the arc of the disease from Fang Lin, a meat cutter in one of Shenzhen's exotic animal markets and one of the disease's first suspected cases, to the final suspected case a year later, a thirty-two year old television reporter in Guangdong, with 884 dead and nearly 8,500 infected as the epidemic ran its course. Along the way, we meet a wide-ranging cast of characters, including China's most famous physician, Zhong Nanshan, WHO researcher Dr. Carlo Urbani in Vietnam, the family of Anna Kong in Hong Kong's Amoy Gardens residential complex, one of the outbreak's most virulent sites, Dr. Jiang Yanyong, who blew the whistle on Beijing's false reporting of SARS in the nation's capital, and Hong Kong microbiologists Malik Peiris and Guan Yi, who isolated the SARS coronavirus and identified its host source.

Mr. Greenfeld presents the story of SARS as a series of short vignettes, each centered around one of the players in the SARS story: victim, carrier, doctor, nurse, politician, epidemiologist, microbiologist, WHO member, or his own family. These short, newspaper length snapshots create a sense of immediacy and intimacy; following one on another, they trace out very effectively the multiple simultaneous threads of the SARS story line. The author has clearly done an immense amount of research and interviewing, delivering each person's slice of the story with telling personal details that make these individuals come alive. Rather than being an academic historical accounting of a nearly tragic pandemic, CHINA SYNDROME reads as a story of medical fear and confusion, of scientific drive and frustration, of political calculation and obfuscation, and of selfless (and sometimes tragic) heroism in the face of an unknown danger. And there most certainly were heroes in the SARS battle. Guan Yi literally risked his life to smuggle infection samples out of mainland China; Dr. Jiang Yanyong risked his career to expose Beijing's lies about the seriousness of SARS within the mainland and has since suffered house arrest; Carlo Urbani sent early samples of the infection to the WHO before he, too, died of SARS, effectively giving the entire planet a head start on isolating the virus. The actions of these three men alone certainly saved the lives of countless thousands and helped gain understanding of the disease and how to combat it.

Mr. Greenfeld's story makes all too clear just how fragile and precarious is the line separating civilized society from debilitating viral pandemic. Those front lines are manned by a small cadre of dedicated epidemiologists, microbiologists, and health professionals, including those at the U.N. World Health Organization. It is only by their collective knowledge and vigilance that future pandemics will be minimized or prevented. One cannot read CHINA SYNDROME without experiencing a sense of dread over how close we came in 2003, how lucky we were, and how likely it is that another, perhaps even more virulent virus, can attack us at any time. Equally scary is the realization that China's government appears not to have learned its lesson from the SARS experience, that a handful of self-serving technocrats were, and still are, willing to put the entire planet at risk for the sake of their own political self-preservation.

As for the author's ability to convey the degree to which SARS shut down life in China, I give him only a 4. The dread atmosphere created by SARS receives rather short shrift in the book. Even in cities like Suzhou, where no cases of SARS were reported, life and commerce came to a near halt. Every stranger was suspect, every cough was an alarm, every public surface a risk of infection. I hope I never again experience something that so closely duplicated the atmosphere of Camus's THE PLAGUE, and I was not even living in a city where SARS was present. The fear of its arrival was enough by itself, and Mr. Greenfeld falls a bit short in conveying just how powerful this fear was. I was also mildly disappointed to not see tables or charts showing the number of infections and deaths by country and by province within China at different time intervals; these would have added greatly to the story by illustrating more precisely how, and how widely, the disease actually spread.

On balance, however, I credit Mr. Greenfeld with a meticulously researched, highly readable, and well-told story that will make you realize how much of a bullet we dodged and how easy it would be for the next epidemic to be far worse. I highly recommend CHINA SYNDROME to anyone interested in epidemiology and the prospects for a future global pandemic.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars True to life - pretty much, August 2, 2006
By 
This review is from: China Syndrome: The True Story of the 21st Century's First Great Epidemic (Hardcover)
Having been involved in the SARS epidemic laboratory testing working group at CDC in Atlanta I was very interested in the way this book tells the tale of how it all came about. These things start with rumors, samples come in, testing is done and the results reported. So much for the lab work. Then the medical journals report the epidemiology - nice if you are an epidemilogist, but dry otherwise. We very rarely get a richly detailed account of the whole story. Mr. Greenfield does that here and does a great service in that he shows the real world of infectious disease - which most people don't want to think about. The descriptions are excellent (I will never approach a "wild flavor" restaurant as long as I live!). The tension is kept throughout the book, much as the tension in the lab when the outbreak is happening - round the clock lab work, constant talks with collegues around the world, competition to see who can get it first. It's all there.

The only complaint I have is that he gets many details of the lab work blatently wrong and so I wonder sometimes about the details of other things he presents. This may seem minor, but if he is trying to present an authoritative view, then he has to be reasonably correct in all aspects. If I see many glaring mistakes in the areas I have intimate understanding of, then how can I trust what he says about things I don't know much about?

Even with these concerns over all the book is very good and captures the essence of how an outbreak proceeds and the real human carnage that occurs behind the headlines and dry news copy.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
FANG LIN, TWENTY-FOUR, TOLD ME HE HAD AWAKENED TO THE USUAL cacophony: the bleat of a truck reversing; the steady, metallic thump of a jackhammer; the whining buzz of a steel saw; the driving in of nails; the slapping down of bricks; the irregular thumping-like sneakers in a dryer-of a cement mixer. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Hong Kong, Guan Yi, Fang Lin, Ministry of Health, Zhong Nanshan, Amoy Gardens, Wild Flavor, World Health Organization, Malik Peiris, Huang Yong, United States, Yang Chin, Prince of Wales Hospital, Guangzhou Institute of Respiratory Diseases, Deng Zide, Department of Health, New York, Jiang Zemin, Pearl River Delta, Hanoi French Hospital, Penfold Park, Henk Bekedam, Huang Wenjie, Susan Jakes, David Heymann
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