Wednesday April 29, 2009
David Shipley - 6:48 AM AST

Can the web help fight the Swine flu?

Watching the Mexican swine flu outbreak turn into an epidemic (and hopefully not a full-out pandemic) the thought has crossed my mind whether advanced communications technology can help mitigate the impact of this disease.

In the three previous major flu pandemics (1918 Spanish Flu, which called 20-50 million; the 1958 Asian flu, one to four million; and the 1968 Hong Kong Flu, one million) we didn't have the communications tools we have now, particularly broadband Internet.

I hope that companies and government have taken the web into consideration in pandemic planning. The easiest way to limit the spread of the disease is to cut down on people gathering in groups until the disease abates. This can be done by restricting public events / gatherings but it can also be done by limiting people gathering at work. At a minimum, the web can help sick employees stay home.

Companies should be encourarged to tell their employees to stay home if they feel sick - without the loss of compensation if they can work from home.

Utlimately, while the 'net can help mitigate the economic costs of a pandemic, it's up to government, companies and individuals to take the initative to use it to its full potential to help save lives and continue day-to-day business.

Please Log In or Register FREE

You are currently not logged into this site. Please log in or register for a FREE ONE Account.
Logged in visitors may comment on articles, enter contests, manage home delivery holds and much more online. Your ONE Account grants you access to features and content across the entire CanadaEast Network of sites.

Blog: Bits & Bytes

A look at the latest trends in technology, from personal computing to consumer electronics and the web.
Advertisement

RSS Feed

Add this blog RSS feed to your newsreader or web site. For more information detailing how this RSS feed, and others on this site, may be used click here.

Search Articles