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SPEECH IN SUPPORT OF THE INFECTIOUS
DISEASES (AMENDMENT NO. 2) BILL BY DR BALAJI SADASIVAN - MINISTER
OF STATE (HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENT)
Mr. Speaker Sir,
I rise to speak in support of the bill,
SARS is a new disease. It hit us without warning.
On Mar 12, when WHO issued its warning, we were unsure what
the disease pattern was going to be or how it was transmitted
or what the patient outcome was going to be. Because we are
dealing with the unknown, it is natural to be afraid. In this
battle against SARS and the fear that SARS induces, information
is power. It helps overcome our fear and puts problems in
the correct perspective. In the last 6 weeks, we have learnt
much about this disease that allows us to better assess the
danger that SARS poses. I want to highlight three key points
that members and Singaporeans should take note of.
Most Patients Recover
The first point is that SARS is a serious disease.
There is a mortality of 5-10%. But this means that 90% do
recover. Of the 192 patients diagnosed with SARS, 120 have
recovered and have been discharged from hospital. More will
be discharged in the coming days. Since SARS is a new disease,
to get a perspective of how dangerous or serious it is, let
us compare SARS with other diseases. SARS is not like cancer.
In cancer, even with treatment, you may not have a cure. Cancer
treatment is long and difficult and you always have to worry
about the cancer coming back. SARS is not like stroke, where
you may recover but you may be left with a disability for
the rest of your life. In SARS 90% of patients recover. They
return to work as per normal without any disability. And because
they have antibodies against SARS, they are immune from getting
SARS again.
In fact, at Tan Tock Seng Hospital, there are
3 doctors who have caught SARS. They have been treated and
have returned to work at Tan Tock Seng to look after other
SARS patients. Two more doctors who are now at home will return
to work next week and join them. Our research teams testing
the diagnostic kits need specimens of mucus from the back
of the throat. You need to be well protected to take a swab
from the back of the throat of a SARS patients because when
you tickle the back of the throat of a patient, he may cough
into your face spraying you with a lot of SARS virus. These
SARS recovered doctors can safely obtain the specimens because
they are immune to the disease and cannot catch SARS again.
They are helping our research teams obtain specimens from
SARS patients.
Patients who have recovered from SARS are not
only returning to work, they are also helping other new SARS
patients fight the virus. When you recover from SARS, you
have plenty of antibodies in your blood that can kill SARS
virus. These patients donate their antibodies to new patients
to help them fight the SARS virus. This is called serum therapy
and new SARS patients at Tan Tock Seng are benefiting from
this treatment.
The best place in the world to get treatment
for SARS is Tan Tock Seng Hospital. They have the most knowledge
and experience dealing with the disease and we have given
them all the resources they need.
Last week, at my meet the people session, a
young man, a technician, saw me for help. He had lost his
job. He wanted his employer to re-instate him. I asked him
why he lost his job. He said he went to a neighboring country
for a week without applying for leave and his company terminated
his services. I asked him why he did that. He replied he was
scared of SARS so he went to a small town to hide. I looked
at him. He was young and athletic and I asked him why he was
afraid of SARS? He said he had a cough. I told him lots of
people have cough. He than told me he went to Hong Kong in
mid February to participate in a sporting event and so he
was afraid he had SARS. So I asked the young man to review
his actions. If he did not have SARS, he has lost his job
because of his fear. But if he had SARS, would he be better
off in a small town with no or little medical expertise or
in Tan Tock Seng Hospital with the care equal to the best
in the world. The young man had no answer. He realized he
had allowed fear to take control of him.
The fear of SARS is more dangerous than the
disease SARS itself.
SARS is controllable
The second point I want to highlight is that
SARS is controllable. In looking at our cases, we find that
our SARS cases caught their infection by having close contact
with a person who was feeling unwell from SARS. If we can
isolate SARS patients early, we can stop transmission. We
need the help of all Singaporeans to do this. Singaporeans
are a socially responsible people and are united in this battle.
But we need the cooperation of every Singaporean. One weak
link and the virus will use that link to pass on to the next
person. A single person with SARS, if he is the weak link
in our defense and does not behave responsibly and if he is
infectious, he can pass on the infection to as many as 20
persons. Hence the need to amend the Infectious Disease Bill
to get the few who may not be responsible to join us in this
fight against SARS.
We Are at a Critical Point
The third point I would like to highlight is
that we are at a critical point in our battle against SARS.
This week, WHO downgraded Toronto?s status to that of Hong
Kong, Guangdong, Beijing, that is a place for travelers to
avoid. We are at the brink, If we fail to contain the outbreak,
we may end up joining Toronto, Beijing and Hong Kong as places
that travelers should avoid. This will cost us many jobs.
However, if we work together, we can move away from this brink
and contain the outbreak. Hence the need for urgency and resolution
in our actions.
Mr. Speaker Sir, I support the Bill
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