This past 8 months has been interesting here in Osaka. In addition to all of the thousands of amusing things Japan has to offer, there was the North-Korea rocket launch and now the Swine influenza -”Influenza A(H1N1)” – ‘outbreak’.
Some days ago, a high school kid was identified with the disease. Yesterday the number had climbed to 46 (http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200905180029.html), all in the Kobe/Hyogo area just next to Osaka. The national authorities have responded and closed almost all schools in the area. At least 530 schools notified of closing yesterday, today many more, including my university. (You should notice, that Hirakata, the city I live in, is on the other side of Osaka, and it takes around 2 hours in a train from Kobe to Hirakata. This is not much in Japan, where 1-2,5 hours to school or work is normal. Many of our students come from Kobe too.)
Indeed, our university has also decided to close its gates from 13.30 today until next monday. It is quite unfortunate, since we are supposed to have our final exams now. Also, our Completion (graduation) Ceremony, that was scheduled to take place on saturday, is cancelled. What a shame, I was really looking forward for the ceremony, and also to the exams.. no joke. The school will decide today how we are to be graded. If my teachers are reading this, don’t bother to think too much: I’ll have all A’s, thanks.

Because of H1N1, some japanese girls + an american exchange student felt they needed a mask for .. protection. Taken today after our school announced it will shut down for a week.
Now I’m not an expert on influenza. I can not say what should be done, but I can say that it seems like over reaction here in Japan which escalates when the ‘information’ spreads. For example, according to the Asahi Newspaper, Health Ministry officials have advised that people should avoid peak-time public transportation and to wear masks on crowded public places. Our school sent us an urgent email and made announcements via public speakers before closing the university today. They advised: “We would also like to urge you to stay at home/dormitory and avoid
going out. When you have to go out, please make sure to wear masks.” You see the difference? Now this is just a small thing, but it shows how misinformation spreads when every turn someone cuts corners.
My school, Kansai Gaidai, said: “we are trying our best to secure the safety of our students”. Well, the best thing would be to prevent panic. Spreading fear doesn’t help. In the midst of fear people don’t think rationally (bad). In their notice by our school, we weren’t reminded how important washing of hands is. It reminds me of a study done, where a bunch of people played poker. Some of them had a flue and all players got infected. The only man present who didn’t get the infection, was a guy who sat at the table but didn’t play, he just watched. Thus even though he was breathing the same air, he was not touching the cards and got of easy…
Anyways, so many kids were wearing masks here. Oh, Japanese just love those masks.. they may help with (pollen) allergies, and they may be required by the culture to be used when the person himself has a flue, but I don’t think it has been confirmed that those paper mask prevent you from getting the influenza.
I understand that the authorities are worried with diseases. First of all, thats what Japanese do, they just love to worry about everything, including nonsense… secondly, people live very tightly. They travel long distances to work and school every day in trains jam-packed. At stations and in down town you just can’t avoid being in crowds. If you think about handles at staircases, doors, elevators etc. you can just imagine how many people touch the same surfaces every day. If a really dangerous an easily spreading disease were to spread, I can see that it could travel fast in here. For example, the south side of the main island is like one big city – if you travel by train, the houses along the track never end.
However, im not sure if this H1N1 is as dangerous as some people are keen to fear, for example compared to normal flu, which for example kills 36,000 people in the US every year. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8031761.stm) Most people don’t get seriously ill because of swine flu, luckily. Many who died in Mexico were healthy 25-40 year olds, bad for me.. hahah.. no seriously, I’m not worried at all. Just pissed off about all the fuzz.















































