How can we behave as if nothing is different when things are, in fact, different? I'm no Dr. but it is my understanding that although the normal Flu has a sobering mortality rate, usually people die after a while, not suddenly, not within a day or 2. The boy in Florida died suddenly, and that hit a nerve with me. There is no way to prepare or treat something that can be lethal in under 48 hrs even in a hospital setting. There is no amount of attention or care to treat something that aggressive after the fact and if this is sizing up to be more lethal in certain sub-sets of the population then those sub-sets need special consideration before we are over-running the hospitals.
I think you are making some assumptions here and not having enough information to do so.
So, the boy who died had asthma. He was 6 years old. That is all we know. Did the media say that this boy, with asthma, was under the care of a pulmonologist (like our kids are) and has his asthma well-controlled? No, because the media NEVER tells you the whole story. You can bet on it that if someone with untreated asthma (who actually may have it aggravated due to living with smokers let's say), gets a respiratory illness, they can darn sure die in 24 hours and that has NOTHING to do with the strain of the flu.
Based on this media report(s), you are assuming that this flu puts asthmatics in more danger than other strains, assuming that asthmatics are going to die if they get H1N1, and assuming that the asthmatic child was properly treated and died anyway. I'm betting the oppposite, but hey, maybe I've had my rose-colored glasses on for too long.
I'm not saying that you shouldn't be concerned, especially with asthmatic children. You can bet I'll be really scared if my son gets this; however, I'm just not going to buy into the fact that this strain is deadlier, that asthmatics are more at risk then they normally are, or that this is some killer anymore than any other flu. Alternatively, I never get a false sense of control that a flu shot actually works but I do it anyway. So not having this shot for this H1N1 doesn't really mean anything to me.
I said this earlier in the thread and I'll repeat it. I believe that many young asthmatic children are not properly treated. I know that my son exhibited asthma symptoms when he was 2 years old and we couldn't get anyone to properly treat his asthma until he was 7 and had two hospitalizations. Totally unavoidable. But I believe that many asthmatics are undertreated and I would almost bet that this boy succombed so quickly for that reason.
A friend of mine has asthma (adult) and she refuses to treat herself properly. She also keeps a cat which she is allergic to. She decided to go on vacation to Florida. With the drastic weather change and humidity change, she was in the Florida ER within 24 hours after arriving. This is someone who should be worried about the flu.