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By Neely Tucker
With new evidence of anthrax over the
past two weeks establishing a wider reach of the deadly microbe,
emergency rooms and waiting areas of private clinics are seeing
an onrush of people who are worried that anything from a rash
to a persistent sniffle may be a precursor to the disease
in some form or other.
These patients, who do not show up in
any count of anthrax-related cases, are evidence that the
fear of the disease is far outpacing its presence.
As the crisis has unfolded, doctors and
their worried patients agree on one thing: The lack
of knowledge on what to do next, even among the
nation's most advanced disease specialists, has amplified
the fear factor more than anything else.
After a D.C. postal worker died after
being sent home from Southern Maryland Hospital Center with
what an emergency room physician initially thought was the
flu, no one seems sure that a cough is just a cough.
The volume of patients is now troubling
because as flu season approaches, and as public health officials
appear unable to offer consistent guidance about who is at
risk, physicians say the "worried but well" patients
could multiply rapidly.
Doctors are mindful of the misdiagnosis
of the DC postal worker but are frustrated by their dilemma.
"No one wants to be
the doctor who misses the real thing," said
David Milzman, an attending physician at Providence. "But
the symptoms are so broad, and treatment is now so broad,
that it makes it very difficult for us to turn people away,
even when you immediately know that this person isn't really
sick."
"We always have more patients in
flu season, but these are flu patients who think they've got
something worse," he said. "It's reasonable, given
how little we know about the disease.
But we're trying to stress to people that
if you came in a month ago with a cold, we would not have
given you antibiotics. We're not going to give you antibiotics
for a cold now. I spend most of my time with these patients
trying to relieve their anxiety rather than a specific medical
condition."
In a week in which anthrax has turned
up at more than a half-dozen sites in the area, and killed
a woman in New York who had no known exposure to large quantities
of mail, people are reacting predictably. Many people with
seasonal aches and colds are now nervous, wondering whether
they are feeling the onset of the deadly disease.
In Bullock's examining room, the ill postal
worker takes off his shirt, pulls on a gown, and answers Bullock's
questions as she listens to his heart with a stethoscope and
monitors his vital signs. He delivers mail, he tells her,
though not from Brentwood.
An environmental test showed his post
office to be free of anthrax spores, but
the staff doesn't trust it. He had been given a
supply of the antibiotic Cipro but thought it was needless
because he had no symptoms.
Then he came down with a cough. Then the
runny nose. Then a headache, so bad it made it difficult to
complete his deliveries.
"I didn't want to be part of the
hype," he tells Bullock. "You know, everybody running
around, thinking they've got anthrax. But it started getting
to me last night. I couldn't sleep, I guess because of the
fear. My wife was after me about it, so I finally decided
to come in."
Others who don't come in are confused
and nervous, alarmed by news reports of anthrax findings but
unable to discern whether they are at risk.
Elizabeth Loeb, a Justice Department employee,
heard on television Tuesday morning that the Friendship post
office tested positive for anthrax spores. She and her 2-year-old
daughter had visited that post office Friday. She wanted to
know, urgently, if they should be tested.
First, she called DC General Hospital,
but the person answering the telephone was unaware
of the anthrax finding reported two hours earlier.
Then she called the DC Health Department's anthrax hot line.
It was busy for 20 minutes. She called the mayor's call center,
where an operator referred her to the same hot line.
"The operator said, 'This is the
only number we have,' " Loeb said. "I said I'd really
like to talk to someone more senior. That's when she hung
up on me."
Loeb eventually got a call in to the Health
Department, after insisting on speaking to the mayor's office.
Finally, she was told she should be fine -- neither she nor
her daughter needed to take any drugs or report to the hospital.
Her experience reflects something that
Daniel Ein, a doctor in private practice and chairman of the
DC Hospital Association's new emergency preparedness committee,
says may be sending people to doctors' offices.
"The guidance we've all had in this
has not been very good," he said, referring to some changing
policy statements from the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. "Many of us have tried to cobble together
policies based on what has proven to be
inadequate information.
Most of it, to be honest, has been coming
from newspapers and television. The term of art is that this
is an 'evolving science,' and that doesn't leave people feeling
very secure. They want personal reassurance."
Washington
Post November 1, 2001; Page B01
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