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- <text id=93TT1895>
- <title>
- June 14, 1993: Evil Over the Land
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 14, 1993 The Pill That Changes Everything
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 57
- Evil Over the Land
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A deadly illness plagues the Navajo nation
- </p>
- <p>By ANASTASIA TOUFEXIS--With reporting by Elaine Lafferty/Gallup
- and Scott Norvell/Atlanta
- </p>
- <p> A bright green sign is taped to the glass doors at the entrance
- to the Indian health facility in Crownpoint, New Mexico: IF
- YOU HAVE HAD FEVERS, CHILLS, JOINT AND MUSCLE ACHES, COUGHING
- OR HEADACHES, PLEASE NOTIFY THE NURSE AT THE FRONT DESK IMMEDIATELY.
- Inside, the waiting room of the 39-bed hospital is jam-packed:
- the old, the middle-aged, children and even an unattended prisoner
- in flimsy ankle cuffs.
- </p>
- <p> What has brought them crowding together is an illness that is
- baffling scientists and panicking the 175,000 residents of the
- 17 million-acre Navajo nation. So far, 18 people have been struck
- with what is being called "unexplained adult respiratory-distress
- syndrome." Almost all the victims have lived on or near the
- reservation, which stretches across northwestern New Mexico
- and into Arizona and Utah. Of the 11 who have died, nine are
- Indians. The outbreak came to light last month, when a young
- Navajo man fell ill on his way to the funeral of his 24-year-old
- girlfriend, who had died from a curious flulike ailment. Five
- days later, the man himself was dead; the couple's infant son
- was also stricken but survives.
- </p>
- <p> The malady begins with a fever and muscle aches in the legs,
- hips and lower back--and coughing, red eyes or a headache.
- Within a few hours or days at most, it abruptly worsens. Lung
- tissue swells with fluid, making it hard for the patient to
- breathe. Despite antibiotics and ventilators, victims can quickly
- suffocate. Unlike most respiratory illnesses, which tend to
- strike infants or the elderly, who have immature or weakened
- immune systems, this one primarily attacks the young and healthy.
- "The pattern is different than anything I've ever seen," says
- Dr. Frederick Koster, an infectious-disease specialist at University
- Hospital in Albuquerque. The latest fatality was a 13-year-old
- Navajo girl, who collapsed after dancing at a school graduation
- party at Red Rock State Park outside Gallup. "I will see that
- scene for the rest of my life," says Sammy Trujillo, a park
- manager. "Her mother was screaming, `Somebody save my child!'
- and there was nothing I could do."
- </p>
- <p> Health officials from several states, the Indian Health Service
- and the National Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- have mounted a frantic investigation to determine the cause
- of the illness. Health workers have fanned out across the reservation,
- taking samples of food, water and soil, as well as combing through
- the coats of cows, sheep and dogs for hair, ticks, fleas and
- fecal matter. "We've excluded the usual bacterial, fungal and
- parasitic infections," says Dr. Ron Voorhees, a New Mexico state
- epidemiologist. Ruled out are anthrax, plague and Legionnaires'
- disease, as well as insecticides and other toxins. Two bacteria
- are among the suspects: Mycoplasma fermentans and Chlamydia
- pneumoniae, both of which can cause fatal lung inflammations.
- But topping the list of possible culprits is a virus.
- </p>
- <p> Investigators cannot dismiss the possibility that they are dealing
- with a new killer, given the emergence of such ailments as Legionnaires'
- disease, toxic-shock syndrome and AIDS over the past two decades.
- Modern life is constantly creating new opportunities for microbes,
- warns author and infectious-disease specialist Dr. Richard Krause
- of the National Institutes of Health. Legionnaires', he notes,
- developed because air-conditioning ducts created a new breeding
- ground for bacteria; toxic shock was linked with the introduction
- of highly absorbent tampons and AIDS with population shifts
- and changing sexual mores. At week's end investigators were
- focusing on the possibility that the illness might somehow be
- linked to inhaling a virus present in rodent droppings, though
- whether it is a new virus or an unfamiliar form of an old one
- was unclear.
- </p>
- <p> The search for a culprit has been complicated by Indian customs.
- Navajos do not speak of the dead for fear it might slow the
- spirit's trip to the afterlife. Nor do they permit autopsies.
- Tribal members tend to view an untimely death with shame, since
- it might be interpreted as punishment for bad living. Indeed,
- some Indian elders were linking the illness to the adoption
- of fast food, MTV and video games. In radio broadcasts, Navajo
- president Peterson Zah beseeched his intensely private people
- to cooperate with health-care workers.
- </p>
- <p> One encouraging note is that the illness does not appear to
- be highly contagious. But that has not stemmed concern on and
- off the reservation. Last week a private day school in Los Angeles
- canceled a long-planned visit of 27 Navajo third-graders from
- Chinle, Arizona, fearing the children might be carrying the
- disease.
- </p>
- <p> To deal with Indian fears and bring people back into harmony
- with nature, the Navajos are calling on their medicine men.
- "Western medicine has its limitations," observes president Zah.
- Last week 69-year-old Mark Charlie carried two orange toolboxes
- filled with crystals, arrowheads and other totems into a canyon
- at Red Rock State Park to conduct a "blessing way." He lighted
- a fire of cottonwood, chanted prayers and read the ashes. When
- he emerged, he promised the park would be safe. At week's end
- there were no new cases of the mysterious illness. But no one
- was sure whether the blessing had taken hold or whether it was
- simply a lull before the evil descends over the land once more.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-