Monday, February 20, 2006

Healthcare Workers Will Stay On Duty More Faithfully Than Recent Study Reports

Healthcare Workers Will Stay On Duty More Faithfully Than Recent Study Reports

Healthcare workers will rise to the demands of a bird flu pandemic, despite a recent study showing that a poll says 42% will stay home.

Ballwin, MO (PRWEB) May 31, 2006

[PRWEB] May 31, 2006 -- A study published in the April issue of the journal BMC Public Health reported 42% of surveyed healthcare workers said that they would not report to work during an influenza pandemic.

308 employees of three Maryland public health departments were polled from March through July 2005. Only 33% of them felt they were knowledgeable about influenza pandemics.

"People can't predict how they'll react during a crisis," says Richard Stooker, author of How to Protect Yourself and Your Family From Bird Flu. "I believe that many healthcare workers would heed the call of duty if necessary -- more than think they would when they're completing some unnecessary paperwork."

"The real risk to our medical establishment during a bird flu pandemic is not that ordinary workers won't do their jobs -- most will. It's that many will become sick and die because they're exposed to flu patients. It's also that hospitals and clinics will run out of beds, Tamiflu, vaccines, respirators and basic supplies. Hospital management may decide to shut hospitals simply to protect themselves from post-pandemic lawsuits. That's a risk the government will have to address, probably by just taking over all available hospitals to eliminate the legal risks."

Richard Stooker researched the bird flu virus A/H5N1 and created a start to finish proprietary 7 Perimeter Immune Defense System that explains how to defeat bird flu at every stage. He also provides a list of the Super Immunity 7 herbs and supplements.

More information on how you can learn How to Protect Yourself and Your Family is available at the author's website and blog.

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