Twitter and swine influenza

Twitter logoCan a popular microblogging service like Twitter actually do more harm than good by causing panic through (mis)information in the general public at a time of crisis? This is one question that a blog post on the Foreign Policy -page raises now when a strain of swine influenza [wikipedia.org] has started spreading around the globe among humans and of course raises headlines in the media.

A funny counterpart to the article is this take on the subject from the nice’n’nerdy webcomic xkcd :
http://xkcd.com/574/

And one more swine flu related social media -bit: the use of Google Maps to create a realtime map following the outbreak is interesting [Update 12.5.09: map no longer running on regular Google Maps because of amount of data used], and depending on how big this thing get can be interesting to follow. Google even has a flu trends -service, at least for the U.S., but more of this in the original article – read that for an interesting blog piece on the subject.

As a side note I might mention that I quit Twitter after a week (see my previous and first post on the subject), I just didn’t feel comfortable with it at this point. Writing these blog posts is enough for me right now. I find the similar Yammer -service more useful since most of the other university e-learning people I work with are there –  thus I have a ready community in Yammer ready for me that I didn’t have in Twitter.

References:

Swine flu: Twitter’s power to misinform
http://neteffect.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2009/04/25/swine_flu_twitters_power_to_misinform

Pets and the dangers of climate change

Dogpills

RSS feeds brought this short piece by New Scientist to my attention, which highlights the findings of a couple of articles about diseases spreading in pets because of the rapidly warming climate [wikipedia.org]. This affects humans as well, but now there is data on the pet-side of things as well. Since ticks and mosquitoes that were previously hindered from coming to Europe because of colder weather now find it possible to do so, they also spread the diseases linked with them. Apparently ticks of the Ixodes genus spread TBE [wikipedia.org] to many other species of mammals (incl. the common pets) as well as humans, and dog ticks spread a malaria-like disease… ticks are nasty little pieces of work, I have to admit. Mosquitoes are much nicer, but besides giving us malaria they also spread roundworms to pets. And then there are fleas…

Link:
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn16924-pets-may-become-latest-victims-of-climate-change.html

Further reading:
Punkkien levittämät taudit koirilla [Scalibor vet. -lääkemainossivu huom.]