Malta Independent

Uncalled for hysteria

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We witnessed, on Tuesday, scenes reminiscen­t of the National Geographic documentar­y series ‘Doomsday Preppers.’

People flooded into discount supermarke­ts, leaving shelves barren of products such as preserves, pasta, rice and long-life milk.

Videos posted on social media showed long queues of people and chaos in the supermarke­t isles, with shoppers overfillin­g their trolleys with items that will surely come in handy when the dreaded Coronaviru­s eventually hits Malta, as if stocking up on spaghetti and tomato sauce will save us from the impending Judgment Day.

We are, of course, being highly sarcastic. Yes, it is quite likely that the Coronaviru­s will reach our shores in the coming days or weeks, but this does not mean that we should panic, go to the notary to draw up a will and dig nuclear bunkers under our homes.

Quite frankly, we are more worried about the mass hysteria that seems to be gripping our nation, fanned by the flames of fake news and pure ignorance on Facebook.

Over thirty thousand people have so far joined a Facebook group providing ‘updates’ on the spread of the Coronaviru­s, but such forums are only serving to increase people’s unfounded fears. Yes, many have joined these groups for a bit of banter, and several posts are downright sarcastic, but not everyone is getting the jokes. Many people are actually preparing themselves for a doomsday scenario. Some have even set up prayer meetings, to pray the Coronaviru­s away.

People need to learn how to separate the myths from the facts. And the facts lie in the numbers. Out of a population of 7 billion people, 80,000 have been infected, with over 77,000 of these being in China. The mortality rate of Coronaviru­s is around 2%, much less than SARS and other past pandemics. Healthy individual­s have a high chance of recovery if infected.

We are not saying this to downplay what is happening across the globe, but we must also keep things in perspectiv­e and not let fear win over rationalit­y. The world survived other forms of viruses in the past, and it will survive this one too. The worst thing that we can do is to misinform ourselves, panic, and doubt the authoritie­s.

While some might try to turn this issue into a political football, the fact remains that the people working in our health sector today are the same people who worked in the health sector a few years back. We trusted them then, so why not trust them now?

We must also be wary of those who are trying to blame the media. While we cannot speak on behalf of all media houses, most of us are doing our best to inform the public about the true facts, without causing alarm. We are triple and quadruple checking every piece of informatio­n that comes in before publishing. And no, we are not hiding anything from anyone – that is in no one’s interest.

Once again, we appeal to the public: keep a level head, check the facts, take the necessary precaution­s and, above all, do not panic.

 ??  ?? A Catholic woman holds a rosary and prays on Ash Wednesday at Saint Mary's Basilica in Hyderabad, India, yesterday. Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, a solemn period of 40 days of prayer and self-denial leading up to Easter. Photo: AP
A Catholic woman holds a rosary and prays on Ash Wednesday at Saint Mary's Basilica in Hyderabad, India, yesterday. Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, a solemn period of 40 days of prayer and self-denial leading up to Easter. Photo: AP

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