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Jessica Jaganathan
News Reporter
Afraid of H1N1 no longer
July 05, 2009 Sunday, 01:34 AM
Jessica Jaganathan is surprisingly blase about meeting a recoveree.

H1N1.

What a scary sounding foreign name. No one knew what it was capable of doing just two months ago. Then, if I had to interview a person who had just recovered from the virus, I would probably have gone in trepidation after making sure I was fully-clothed in protective gear and muttering a silent prayer in the process.

Yes, all this even though he might have recovered. What a difference two months has made, after health authorities have found that the virus is not all as serious as they once thought.

On Friday, I had to speak to a teenage boy who had just hours earlier been declared free from the bug. Yet, I didn't even feel an ounce of fear. In fact, I was quite surprised at the over-reaction of people to the disease or to those who have contracted it.

He was recounting his experience at the hospital where people were avoiding him like the plague just because he was wearing a mask. The sixteen-year-old boy thought it was silly. So did I. What struck me about him though, was not the fact that he was another number adding up to the tally of H1N1 cases in Singapore. But, how he remained bubbly throughout the one-hour interview.

Not once was he fazed by the reaction he might be getting when he returns to school on Monday. On the contrary, his friends have been eagerly waiting for him to go out with them, he says. The numerous text messages he was getting while the interview was going on was probably proof of his popularity and that it was no big deal among his teenage friends.

One girl (whom he vehemently denies) is his girlfriend, had even gone to the hospital he was staying in to pass him a teddy bear - albeit through a nurse. When another friend he had not spoken to in ages called while I was there, he almost proudly exclaimed that he recently had H1N1. With a television crew, photographer and journalists milling around him, perhaps it might be almost understandable to hear that tinge of pride in his voice.

His mother, on the other hand, was slightly alarmed that he'd consented to an interview with the media. Her worry, like most Singaporeans': Would people over-react? While the teenager almost sprinted out the front door, his mother was shouting after him to avoid crowded places and to return back home early. Her worry is that he might catch it again - or worse, pass it on to others. The fact that he had recovered did only so much to ease her worries.

For this Republic Polytechnic student, his bubbly personality probably stopped him from being alienated. But there are probably many other quieter people being shunned right now, from people who still don't know what the disease is and what harm it could bring their way. So, the typical Singaporean mentality kicks in: Better to be kiasu and stay away.

Perhaps, the older generation or even those who vividly remember SARS are still not quite convinced that H1N1 might pose no more danger than the seasonal flu. It didn't help that when not much was known of the virus, it appeared as deadly as SARS. With the World Health Organisation throwing words like pandemic, it is no wonder that people are still afraid, but this will probably change now that health authorities are likening it to the seasonal flu.

Having said that, the most important thing, which Singaporeans should already be practising is good hygiene. Now is the time to remind oneself to dispose one's tissues properly and not spit randomly on pavements.

Read Joanne Lee's rather opposite germophobe take on the H1N1 spread here.

Read also Cases cross 1,000 mark here.



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Total comments: 8
ed hardy
July 31, 2009 Friday

I’d be interested in that too.
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comment 6243 | Offensive? Report this comment
PARDONMAN
July 07, 2009 Tuesday

Disagree .
If those who are feeling sick or are seemingly sick start behaving irresponsibly and spread virus in the public , can anyone agree that others should take self precautionary measures by avoiding them , even when they sneeze right in front of you .
You mean I have to change my table in a restaurant the moment someone in the next table cough or sneeze without covering their mouth . Otherwise , please show me how to change oneself to suit such "spread-flu' behaviour .
Perhaps only the healthy ones should wear masks.....you mean ?

comment 5769 | Offensive? Report this comment
Hirza
July 07, 2009 Tuesday

If one is so concerned about the spread of flu from seemingly illl people, than he suggests that they take the precautions themselves. Easier and faster to change oneself than to mould the minset of another.

comment 5767 | Offensive? Report this comment
IHATEFLU
July 05, 2009 Sunday

I spent the whole day shopping in Marina and witnessed at least 8 out of 10 persons sneezing or coughing without covering their mouth .... I doubt there were tissues in their pockets !!!!!! What is going on !!!!!! I am more afraid to catch other viruses from these people than H1N1 virus .Any difference if these are foreigners or fellow countrymen ? Afraid ... be very afraid .

comment 5744 | Offensive? Report this comment
samannah
July 05, 2009 Sunday

Jessica, did you manage to keep a straight face when you wrote "his mother was shouting after him to avoid crowded places..." ? What a joke.... in Singapore, it's one big party wherever you go, what an oxymoron.


comment 5733 | Offensive? Report this comment

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