The Monster at Our Door
Books / Paperback
Books › Medical › Infectious Diseases
ISBN: 0805081917 / Publisher: Holt Paperbacks, August 2006
A sobering forecast of a potentially lethal virus known as H5N1, currently affecting the poultry and wild bird populations of East Asia, evaluates the World Health Organization's concerns that the virus is on the brink of mutating into a pandemic illness and cites the ecological and political factors that are contributing to the threat. Reprint.
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Award-winning writer, urban theorist, and historian Mike Davis presents an investigation of the looming avian flu pandemic—and an in-depth exploration of how we arrived at the brink of a global health catastrophe.The virus known as H5N1 is now endemic among poultry and wild bird populations in East Asia. A flu strain of astonishing lethality, it has a talent for transforming itself to foil the human immune system—and kills two out of every three people it infects. The World Health Organization now warns that avian flu is on the verge of mutating into a super-contagious form that could travel at pandemic velocity, killing up to 100 million people within two years.In The Monster at Our Door, the first book to sound this alarm, our foremost urban and environmental critic reconstructs the scientific and political history of this viral apocalypse in the making, exposing the central roles played by burgeoning slums, the agribusiness and fast-food industries, and corrupt governments. Mike Davis tracks the avian flu crisis as the virus moves west and the world remains woefully unprepared to contain it. With drug companies unwilling to invest in essential vaccines, severe shortages persist, a scenario Davis compares to the sinking Titanic: there are virtually no lifesaving resources available to the poor, and precious few for the rich, too.“Brilliant…[Davis’s] chapter explaining the virus’s avidity for mutation is among the finest 10 pages of science journalism you are ever likely to read…[The Monster at Our Door] goes on to sketch a history of influenza from the 1918 outbreak to the present, addressing all the complex factors playing into the risk of a pandemic today…Fascinating.”—The New York Times
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