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57 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Living Terrors - Somewhere Out There......., October 2, 2000
It arrived late on a Thursday evening. Like the rest of the world, I had much to do over the coming weekend. I would get to it when I had time. Unfortunately, I made the mistake of picking up Living Terrors late that night and scanning the cover jacket. The next thing I knew, I was finishing the second chapter. What was I thinking? By 6 a.m. Sunday morning, I had completed the book and began to consider what I could say to emphasize its critical message. I had yet to get to my weekend chores.First, a disclaimer. While at a national meeting on infectious diseases in the fall of 1998, almost solely out of curiosity, I decided to listen to a presentation on "Bioterrorism" by Dr. Osterholm. I was familiar with him from a distance - he was a well known expert in food borne illnesses and the like, while at the Minnesota Department of Public Health. Like a child being told by his older sibling that there is no Santa Claus, what I heard that day I desperately wanted not to be true, but in my heart, like that child, I knew it was, and I could not go back. Since that time, I have become more and more interested in bioterrorism (defined as the intentional use of biologic agents or their products for the purpose of producing disease among humans, animals or plants) while at the same time convinced that Dr. Osterholm's concerns are right on the mark. It was with this bias that I eagerly awaited publication of his book. As one who grew up during the Cold War, I remember all too well the fears of nuclear war - the civil defense drills and the scenes on black and white television of a simulated nuclear blast with instructions to "take cover". These fears were magnified many fold as I grew older, married, had children and began to slightly understand the true implications of it all. I vaguely recall also of hearing of biologic or germ warfare, but these terms had no real meaning to me at the time. As the Cold War wound down, the Berlin Wall fell, and disarmament began, one could almost hear a collective sigh of relief......until THIS! Michael Osterholm and John Schwartz shock us back to the reality that the war is not over and the bad guys are still out there. They argue convincingly only that the rules have changed, the enemy is more elusive, and an attack, this time in the form of a lethal and quite possibly contagious agent, when (not if) it comes, will be devastating. Depending on the circumstances, the biologic agent chosen, the method of delivery, and the degree of contagiousness, tens, hundreds, or even thousands may die and an untold number left standing will be paralyzed with fear as they wait to see if they, too, will fall victum. Like a Steven King novel, as you read this book, the hair on the back of your neck will begin to rise and your palms will begin to sweat. But this is no novel, and their concerns are not fiction. Living Terrors does not lose you in the science; rather, the far bigger fears of the authors are dramatically emphasized in a series of all too plausible hypothetical scenarios involving bacteria, viruses or their toxic products that begin each chapter. Each is described in terms that anyone can understand, followed by an indepth analysis that is superbly researched, albeit with conclusions that, by their nature, are conjectural. I read each chapter carefully and deliberately, seeking flaws in the author's scenarios and subsequent arguments so that as an infectious disease physician I could offer my own personal perspective competently, and, to hopefully find cracks in their fears. Unfortunately, as I've deliberated these concerns, and as I completed Living Terrors, I found myself only more convinced that they are not alarmists and they are not crazy. Rather, they are right on target. If anything, I believe their analysis, e.g. the relatively successful control of a hypothetical epidemic of smallpox in Milwaukee once it had virtually wiped out Chicago (Chapter 7, Mitigated Disaster), is rather optimistic. Consider also the ethical and legal dilemmas of withholding antibiotics that will be in short supply from a patient who has symptoms of anthrax, and who in all likelihood will die (>80% mortality once symptoms develop), so that they may be saved for others who may not even have been exposed, (the so-called "worried well"). What about the dead? Who would be willing to go near them? Would they be left where they fell? Where would they be taken and who would take them there? What would be done with them? Mass burials? Mass cremation? One can readily imagine what the media would do with this. The authors have a challenging task of writing for several different audiences - the front line physicians who will be the first to see these patients, then to care for them; the politicians and governmental leaders who control the money, give direction, and provide leadership and who will have to explain to all how such a disaster could possibly take place on U.S. soil; and finally, the public whose support is desperatelly needed to get the attention of the politicians and public officials. Unfortunately, most, as yet, have absolutely no clue! Living Terrors is about getting your attention, and it does so completely. It will (or should) scare the hell out of you. It will (or should) make you think, and perhaps even follow some of the authors' suggestions as to what can be done to attempt to dodge the impending cataclysm. Read this book and pay very close attention. We must all understand that as you read this, somewhere out there, in all likelihood, is a misguided individual, group or country that is contemplating such an attack within our own borders. It will not be pretty. Finally, hug your kids and pray that Michael Osterholm and John Schwartz are wrong. G. Blackburn, D.O., Section of Infectious Diseases, Botsford Hospital, Farmington Hills, Mi
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