Dan Morrison's Blog, page 3

July 29, 2012

In India, it’s Mr. Sputum to the Rescue

This post first appeared at NatGeo NewsWatch.

PATNA, India – Perched high on a rooftop amid the pollution and noise of a vibrant Indian city, a new kind of superhero listens for signs of the enemy.

His ears tuned to an array of elaborately curved trumpets, Bulgam Bhai strains to hear the ever-present danger and then pounces. When an Indian coughs, this jocular public health avenger — all candy stripes and waxed mustache –- appears in a flash with a potentially life-saving question:

“Has it been two weeks?”

A persistent cough of more than two weeks can indicate tuberculosis. An estimated 330,000 Indians die each year from TB, according to the World Health Organization, and more than 2 million become infected.

Bulgam Bhai –- his appetizing name means Mr. Sputum in Hindi –- is part of a delightful public service campaign to convince more Indians to visit a clinic or lab if their coughs turn pernicious.

Most cases of tuberculosis are easily curable. Bulgam Bhai’s goal is to spread word f the ready availability of testing and treatment, says Dr. Sarabjit Chadha, project director at Project Axshya which, along with the BBC World Service Trust, created the engaging superhero. (Project Axshya is part of the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease.)

The Bulgam Bhai campaign ran on television and radio in 300 districts of 21 Indian states between February and March, with a potential audience of 234 million people, and was restarted again in July. A nationwide toll-free helpline received more than 1,600 calls during the ad’s first 30 days on the air.

“The campaign was primarily focused on creating awareness about symptoms of TB (i.e. 2 weeks of cough) and the call for action (sputum examination) in the community,” Dr. Chadha said via email. “Preliminary findings suggest that the campaign has been able to achieve the viewership. The response on the advert from the community including physicians has been extremely positive and encouraging.”

India needs more such campaigns, which harness to the public good the infectious humor and imagination of an advertising industry that’s usually devoted to selling products like cars and — much less delightfully — skin-whitening cream.

Bulgam Bhai couldn’t come at a better time.

Even as tuberculosis rates are falling in India and across most of the world, Indian doctors this year announced the first cases of a TB strain that is totally resistant to all antibiotic treatment. Government officials first denied these reports, the Wall Street Journal reported last month, and later – quietly – confirmed them.

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Published on July 29, 2012 04:05

June 17, 2012

Book Love, from Egypt, India, & someplace over the Eastern Seaboard

“If you don’t blow your own horn, there is no music,” Jimmy Breslin, that great id of New York newspapering, said more than once (and I’ve quoted him more than once). And so: Here’s The Black Nile, profiled in The Egypt Independent. The book, “with its attention to fact and suspension of easy judgment, is [...]
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Published on June 17, 2012 07:39

June 2, 2012

On Gandhi and Ganga

Two new pieces at the New York Times/International Herald Tribune: A River Runs Through It weighs the odds of a $40 billion cleanup of the Ganges River. The Gandhian Knot looks at the use and misuse of Gandhi’s name and image — and the takeover of a Gandhian institution by right-wingers.
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Published on June 02, 2012 05:49

May 16, 2012

Opium! Intimate Skin-Bleaching! Egyptian Zombies!

A round-up of recent work: Let’s Buy Afghan Dope, a nearly baked proposal that proved popular with readers at the International Herald Tribune, and was later echoed by Vartan Gregorian, president of the Carnegie Corporation; A Hunger Artist, on the cynicism of India’s belt-waving “Gandhian” savior, Anna Hazare; two pieces on the hunger strikes of [...]
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Published on May 16, 2012 15:59

April 25, 2012

India’s Gangster Politicians

Think "Gangs of New York": At least ten state assembly candidates in India's biggest state are presently in jail on charges that include murder and racketeering. In the current assembly, 139 out of 404 legislators are free while facing criminal charges.
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Published on April 25, 2012 16:01

March 17, 2012

Dying for the Ganges: A Scientist Turned Swami Risks All

This piece first appeared at National Geographic, and was updated Saturday night. G.D. Agrawal is determined to die. "At the moment I am quite resigned to my fate," Agrawal, the 80-year-old dean of India's environmental engineers, tells me by phone from his hospital bed in the holy city of Varanasi. Agrawal hasn't eaten since February [...]
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Published on March 17, 2012 21:16

March 11, 2012

Kony 2012: A View from Northern Uganda

A former child soldier of the Lord's Resistance Army responds to the clamor over Invisible Children and Kony 2012, the NGO's campaign against Joseph Kony and the LRA.
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Published on March 11, 2012 19:31

February 2, 2012

India's Gangster Politicians

Think "Gangs of New York": At least ten state assembly candidates in India's biggest state are presently in jail on charges that include murder and racketeering. In the current assembly, 139 out of 404 legislators are free while facing criminal charges.
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Published on February 02, 2012 12:52

January 31, 2012

Book Burning and Climate Change

Recent pieces for The New York Times/IHT: 'India's Political Blasphemy,' on the Salman Rushdie affair earlier this month at the Jaipur Literary Festival, and 'Come Hell With High Water,' on Bangladesh's approach to global climate change.
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Published on January 31, 2012 00:43

January 24, 2012

Two States: Mass Murder in South Sudan

One year after voting for independence, South Sudan is at war with itself.
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Published on January 24, 2012 12:54