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Betrayal of Trust: The Collapse of Global Public Health

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Click here to buy Betrayal of Trust: The Collapse of Global Public Health by  Laurie Garrett. Betrayal of Trust: The Collapse of Global Public Health
by Laurie Garrett
Sales Rank: 79781
4.0 out of 5 stars
$12.89
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on 9-16-2008.
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Features
  • Cover Type: Paperback with 800 pages
  • Published by: Hyperion August 15, 2001
  • Written in: English
  • ISBN 10 Number: 0786884401
  • ISBN 13 Number: 978-0786884407
  • Book Dimensions: 9 x 6.1 x 2 inches
  • Weighs: 2.1 pounds

Product Review
What do Russia, Zaire, Los Angeles, and--most likely--your community have in common? Each is woefully unprepared to deal with a major epidemic, whether it's caused by bioterrorism or by new or reemerging diseases resistant to antibiotics. After the publication of her critically acclaimed The Coming Plague, which looked at the reemergence of infectious diseases, Laurie Garrett decided to turn her highly honed reportorial skills to what she saw as the only solution--not medical technology, but public health. However, what she found in her travels was the collapse of public-health systems around the world, no comfort to a species purportedly sitting on a powder keg of disease. In Betrayal of Trust, Garrett exposes the shocking weaknesses in our medical system and the ramifications of a world suddenly much smaller, yet still far apart when it comes to wealth and attention to health.

With globalization, humans are more vulnerable to outbreaks from any part of the world; increasingly, the health of each nation depends on the health of all. Yet public health has been pushed down the list of priorities. In India, an outbreak of bubonic plague created international hysteria, ridiculous in an age when the plague can easily be treated with antibiotics--that is, if you have a public-health system in place. India, busy putting its newfound wealth elsewhere, didn't. In Zaire, the deadly Ebola virus broke out in a filthy and completely unequipped hospital, and would have kept up its rampage if the organization Doctors Without Borders hadn't stepped in, not with high-tech equipment or drugs, but with soap, protective gear, and clean water. Most of the world still doesn't have access to these basic public-health necessities. The 15 states of the former Soviet Union have seen the most astounding collapse in public health in the industrialized world. But during a cholera epidemic, officials refused to use the simple cure public-health workers have long relied on--oral rehydration therapy. Many of the problems in these nations can also be found in one degree or another in the U.S., where medical cures using expensive technology and drugs have been emphasized to the detriment of protecting human health. The result? More than 100,000 Americans die each year from infections caught in hospitals, and America has a disease safety net full of holes.

A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist (for Newsday and others), Garrett has deftly turned what could have been a very dry subject into dramatic reportage, beginning with the eerie silence on the streets of Surat, India, where half the city's population (including doctors) fled the plague, while a thick white layer of DDT powdered the ground. Fascinating, frightening, and well-documented, Betrayal of Trust should be read not only by medical professionals and policymakers but the general public, and should galvanize a change in thinking and priorities. --Lesley Reed --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly
On a par with Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, this chilling exploration of the decline of public health should be taken seriously by leaders and policymakers around the world. Garrett, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist for Newsday (The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases in a World Out of Balance), has written an accessible and prodigiously researched analysis of disaster in the making in a world with no functioning public health infrastructure. In India in 1994, neglect of public health for the poor led to an outbreak of pneumonic plague; the once-dreaded disease is now easily treatable with antibiotics, but the failure of Indian authorities to quickly reach a diagnosis and provide accurate information resulted in a worldwide panic. The former Soviet Union, for all its flaws, according to Garrett, assured every citizen access to health care. After the U.S.S.R.'s breakup, the Russian economy collapsed. With no funding left for health care, Russia was overwhelmed by a tuberculosis epidemic. Even the U.S., historically a pioneer in public health (this commitment was demonstrated by New York City's quick and successful response to an 1888 cholera epidemic, as well as the tenement reform movement of the early 1900s that helped eliminate diphtheria), is lagging today. During the Reagan administration, Garrett says, budget cuts dramatically weakened public health while also denying poor Americans access to medical care. The author believes that the medical challenges posed by the epidemic spread of AIDS in Africa, by drug-resistant microbes carried from one country to another and by the danger of biological warfare can be met only by a cooperative global movement dedicated to strengthening public health infrastructures. Garrett sounds the alarm with an articulate and carefully reasoned account. Author tour; NBC Today appearance. (Aug.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Reader Reviews
This is an excellent and yet deeply flawed book. It will (and should) frighten us all into action, and given recent events of Sept 11 and its aftermath - the imminent threat of terrorism that may be biological in nature - this book is extremely well timed. The thesis of the book is that, for a variety of reasons (lack of political will in the US, economic deterioration in the former USSR, and poverty in Africa) public health infrastructures worldwide are in serious decline at the moment that horrible new diseases (Aids, ebola) and new strains of old ones (TB, whooping cough, diphtheria etc) are emerging. If these public health infrastructures are not repaired, she asserts, we are in for horrendous trouble. She may well be right and for this reason, we would do well to heed her plea for renewed investment throughout the world in preventive medicine, epidemiology, and other measures to promote collective, as opposed to the privatized (or "medicalised") health model. It is easy to dismiss this argument as crypto-socialist,but to do so is a disservice both to the talents of Ms. Garrett and to the idea of public health itself. To prove her case, Garrett embarks on an historical tour of the public health systems of both the US and the USSR, both of which were pioneers. The US, in New York but also in Minnesota, developed science-based systems to recognize dangerous contagious agents and to stamp them out via quarantine and later vaccinations and for bacteria, antibiotic treatments. The statistics speak for themselves and are well documented in Garrett's book. Not surprisingly, the USSR developed a more coercive and less scientific system, which was in decline before the fall of communism in 1990; since then, it has declined so alarmingly that death rates in the former Soviet republics are twice as high as births! What is needed, she says, is larger investments to maintain the fragile infrastructures of scientists, other health care professionals, and access facilities. The wider landscape she describes - the context of this deterioration - is bleaker and more terrifying than I had imagined possible. It involves antibiotic-resistent strains of tuberculosis and other ancient scourges, an unprecedented Aids epidemic in Africa and Asia, and in the wake of the defunct Soviet biological warfare programs with 30,000 scientists who disappeared - some apparently into the Middle East - the specter of bioterrorism. (Indeed, some of the Sept 11 pilot-terrorists were getting trained with crop dusters, which could deliver small pox or anthrax to threaten millions.) We may be approaching the end of an era in which we believed science was triumphing over human disease. I now fear for my children. Developments in India (plague) and the Congo Republic (Ebola) are also covered in grim detail. It is here that Garret's argument begins to run into trouble. What has emerged in the US, she says, is a hybrid of conservative ideology (blaming the victim with claims that health is the individual's responsibility) and a "medicalised" model whereby we seek high tech, individualized cures to ailments rather than the less expensive preventive cures that the collective public health model offers. I believe that this is a straw-man dichotomy that oversimplifies the problem, in effect setting up conservative budget cutters to blame for a failure of collective will. While this is certainly true to a degree, the political and economic dimensions of the problem are so complex that Garrett fails to do them justice. Moreover, the medical approach is complementary to the public health one. If the reader want a more realistic appraisal of these issues, (s)he must look elsewhere. Furthermore, there are numerous inaccuracies and errors throughout the book, which damage its credibility. For example, at one point Garrett states that Crick worked at "Oxford University in Cambridge, England"! While this is trivial and an editor should have picked it up, it is symptomatic of the rushed feel to the book, which was obviously written too quickly and perhaps sloppily. Moreover, Garrett glosses over a number of issues that deserved far deeper scrutiny: she dismisses the demise of the Clinton health plan in one page (it was simply "overly complicated"), and rejects claims by the pharmaceutical industry that the cost of drug development is $500 million (because governments fund basic science). The list of these errors and omissions is indeed long. SO in the end the book is a mixed bag. For me, it will serve as a treasure trove of information for my latest writing project, but I worry about the accuracy of many of her claims. It is a very good call to arms for a serious issue and a warning to us all. REcommended with reservation. Comment | | (Report this)


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