from The Hoot

 


 





Did the media catch the flu?





The tempering words of a few individuals cannot possible negate this overall 
picture that comes through the visuals.  KALPANA SHARMA asks if the media lost 
perspective in the way it covered the HINI Flu.

 


Posted Wednesday, Aug 12 16:48:10, 2009











Second Take
Kalpana Sharma
 
 
Is the media responsible for the current swine flu panic in India or is the 
government’s response to blame?  This question is being asked and will continue 
to be asked. While the government could be faulted on many counts, we have to 
consider the media’s responsibilities when there are health emergencies.  
 
First of all, is this a health emergency? Union Health Secretary Naresh Dayal 
was heard on television within a day of the first death being reported 
appealing to the media to have a sense of perspective on the issue.  He pointed 
out that in India, of every 1,000 live births, 55 children die.  Yet, the media 
never considers this a health emergency worth their attention.  But with swine 
flu, every news channel and newspaper has lead with this story for days on end.
 
So has the media lost perspective?  If you look at just the numbers affected 
and the fatalities, you would conclude that it has.  More people die each day 
from malaria, infection, diarrhoea and other gastro-intestinal infections, and 
tuberculosis than have died of swine flu since the first incidents were 
reported.  Therefore why the overdrive by the media?
 
One obvious reason is that when a disease hits the metros or the middle 
classes, it becomes a subject worth pursuing but when it affects people in 
remote areas, no news organisation is willing to invest in sending people to 
cover it.  Every year, hundreds of people die of kala azar, malaria and other 
infectious diseases in non-metro areas in India.  Yet the coverage is only 
perfunctory.  Only if the spread of infection threatens our cities does the 
media wake up and take note. 
 
Typically, television news focused almost exclusively on the swine flu for days 
on end.  On August 11, the Centre asked TV channels to show restraint in their 
coverage.  Although NDTV was one channel that did run a programme reminding 
viewers about other diseases and deaths caused by them that are a daily 
occurrence in a country like India, the main news bulletins on all channels 
were filled with non-stop visuals of people in face masks, crowds lining up in 
front of hospitals and grief stricken families who have lost a loved one.  The 
problem with this type of coverage is that it tends to make the problem larger 
than it is.  The tempering words of a few individuals cannot possible negate 
this overall picture that comes through the visuals.  And when one issue is 
covered to the exclusion of all else, then the general public is forced to 
believe that the problem is acute and out of control when it actually is not. 
 
Print, because of the nature of the media, was a little more moderate although 
not across the board. Some newspapers did try and place the health crisis 
within the larger framework of health care and other diseases.  Yet, as with 
television, the message that the front pages of newspapers conveyed cancelled 
any moderation that might have been there in the coverage on inside pages.
 
On August 11, for instance, three of Mumbai’s English language papers that I 
monitored led with a swine flu story and had banner headlines.  The fourth 
carried it as the first lead but had another story on the top of the fold as 
the second.
 
The Times of India had a banner headline “Not ready for H1N1: City pvt hosps” 
and carried a photograph of doctors in white protective clothing at the 
Haffkine Institute where tests are conducted.  At the same time, also on the 
front page was a story by Nirmala M. Nagaraj under the heading, “India’s public 
health spend amongst lowest” and stated that health spending was even less than 
in some sub-Saharan countries. The placing was significant as it used the swine 
flu to bring home the larger issue of health spending.
 
On an inside page, TOI carried a diagram explaining how and why H1N1 affects 
the young and healthy.  At the bottom of the diagram it raised the question: 
Where is India headed? And answered it: “The last four-five months experience 
has led doctors to ask whether the endemic influenza strains of the country 
actually make us more immune.  Incidentally, our mortality rates have been one 
of the lowest”.  
 
The paper also had a five-column item on what other countries did to contain 
the spread of H1N1, including a graphic setting forth best practices.  It gave 
a chart with the top 10 countries where deaths caused by the virus had been 
reported.  The highest number was from the US.  India did not feature anywhere 
on the list.
 
But do readers read this fine print?  Probably not.  Most of them will read 
headlines, look at visuals and get into panic mode.
 
DNA on the same day had a banner headline: “Govt expands war on H1N1” followed 
by a front-page edit with the headline “A 26/11 challenge for public health”.  
“War”?  Comparisons to “26/11”, the short form for the terror attack on Mumbai 
last November?  Are these really called for?  The edit went on to state: “While 
the death toll is still small, there is little doubt that in a few weeks from 
now we will see a dramatic escalation.  Nothing less than all-out war on H1N1 
will suffice anymore.”  The next day, August 12, it tried to substantiate this 
point by running a story, based on projected trends, under a banner headline: 
“Swine flu cases may hit 1 crore in December”.  Are these kinds of projections 
and the hyperbole in the editorial justified in the current situation where in 
a country of over one billion people, there have been 11 deaths and less than a 
thousand cases of infection?
 
The Hindustan Times on August 11, interestingly enough, tried to bring in some 
kind of perspective even in its page one banner headline that read: “H1N1 kills 
3 more, common flu could be killing 572 a day.”  The story that followed 
explained how many people die of the common flu in a country like the United 
States and through extrapolation worked out the figure for India.  One could 
quibble about the arithmetic but at least an attempt was made to place the 
issue in some kind of larger perspective.  The paper also pointed out that in 
the US, there were 6,506 cases of infection from H1N1 and 436 deaths until 
August 6.  Despite this schools were not closed.  As we know, in India, dozens 
of schools have closed if even one student is found to have an infection.
 
On August 12, the Hindustan Times carried an editorial, “Don’t press the panic 
button” that acknowledged that media had “gone into overdrive and are reporting 
on the issue as though it were the Black Death itself.”  Targeting the 
electronic media, the editorial went on to state, “Ill-informed interviews and 
the all-pervasive ‘breaking news’ logo have created a frightening scenario that 
has obscured the real facts about the virus and how to combat it.”
 
The  Indian Express on August 11 led with a Pune datelined story and reported 
on how it had affected the city.  As it is the place with the highest incidence 
of infection, the story would not have added to the panic. And it carried a 
second lead on a totally different subject.  A full page was devoted inside to 
flu related stories but otherwise the paper carried news from all parts of 
India.
 
In some ways, even this partial survey of the print media underlines its 
importance at times like this.  The newspapers that have attempted to place the 
issue in perspective would have helped calm the panic, that is if we assume 
people read at all, or read beyond the headlines.
 
Television news, on the other hand, contributed to the panic reaction that led 
hundreds of people to rush to hospitals to get tested even if they had the 
mildest symptoms.  Even the best-equipped public health system cannot survive 
such a battering and India certainly does not have the best of such systems. 
 
If the swine flu can teach the media something, it should be this: that there 
are areas like health that require constant and sustained attention and not 
just when a “pandemic” is declared. In many countries, newspapers and news 
channels have dedicated reporters who cover medical and public health issues.  
Over time, these individuals build up a background, contacts and a perspective 
that becomes particularly important at times like this.  For instance, The 
Hindustan Times story mentioned above, is written by Sanchita Sharma who has 
been covering health for many years.  But most Indian newspapers are not 
willing to assign a person specifically for this beat.  As a result, when there 
is a crisis, no senior journalist on the staff is equipped to bring in a 
perspective and guide the coverage.

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