INDIANAPOLIS —
What’s in a name? Everything if you’re a pork producer and if the name of the newest health scare makes people think twice about eating bacon.
The fast rise in the number of people diagnosed with the so-called “swine flu” over the last week has sent pork futures tumbling and re-awakened bad memories of the 2009 flu pandemic bearing the same name.
Health officials have gone to great lengths to call the new bug by a more official name, the variant influenza A(H3N2v), and to tell people it’s safe to eat pork.
But the people who make their living raising and selling hogs fear its the other label that will stick, pointing to headlines that read: “Swine flu cases surge.”
“It’s amazing the impact of a name,” said Mike Platt, executive director of the Indiana Pork Producers Association.
“It’s all about labeling and perception.”
Indiana is the epicenter of what appears to be a new flu strain that’s been dubbed the “swine flu” for a reason. It has the largest number of confirmed human cases in the United States as of Thursday, at 120
State health officials said all of those people infected with the bug got it from handling sick pigs.
The very first human case of a variant influenza A (H3N2v) was detected in Indiana in July 2011 — found in a child who routinely handled pigs.
The Centers for Disease Control calls the variant influenza A (H3N2v) a “swine virus,” meaning its yet to be detected as being passed from human to human — though it could be soon. The CDC also said this new flu strand carries genetic similarities to the first “swine flu” — the H1N1 virus that sickened hundreds of thousands globally in 2009 and plunged the U.S. pork industry into a financial crisis when people stopped eating pork.
Now, as back then, health officials are saying there’s absolutely no reason to stop eating pork or visiting pigs. But now, as back then, the message may not be getting through.
The human foot traffic along Champions Row in the swine barn at the Indiana State Fair has dropped dramatically since Monday when fair officials sent home all of the 4-H exhibitors’ pigs after fever — a sign of the virus — was detected in a handful of hogs.
As alarming for people like Platt are the comments from visitors to the Indiana State Fair Pork Tent, where volunteers are serving up the usually popular pork burgers. “They come in and ask, ‘Are you sure this is safe to eat?’ ” Platt said.
Indiana Lt. Gov. Becky Skillman donned her “Indiana Pork” embroidered shirt to visit the fair Thursday. Skillman has a life-size sculpture of a pig outside her Statehouse office. She’s been worried that this summer’s historic drought, with its huge impact on livestock feed prices, could mean financial calamity for the state’s pork industry.
Unlike most crop farmers that have crop insurance that covers their losses, most hog farmers are without.
Now she sees visions of the summer of 2009, when Indiana’s pork industry, which employs about 13,000 people, took a massive financial hit when people stopped eating pork.
State agricultural officials estimated pork producers suffered a $50 million loss.
“This can devastate an industry,” Skillman said.
Amy Reel, the spokeswoman for the Indiana State Department of Health, and Denise Derrer, the spokeswoman for the Indiana Board of Animal Health have repeatedly asked members of the media to stop using the label “swine flu” and start using either “variant influenza A” or “H3N2.”
Their pleas aren’t working yet. “We’re trying to do the best we can to keep people informed without instilling unnecessary fear in the public or being unfair to the pork industry,” Derrer said before adding this: “It is safe to eat your bacon, and your ham and the pork burgers at the State Fair.”
Maureen Hayden is the Indiana Statehouse bureau chief for CNHI, the parent company of the Tribune-Star. She can be reached at maureen.hayden@indianamediagroup.com.
Local & Bistate
Just call it A(H3N2v) flu
Pork producers cringe at that other name (rhymes with pine)
- Local & Bistate
-
-
Holcomb, other top leaders leaving Indiana GOP helm
INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana Republican Party Chairman Eric Holcomb leads a number of high-level departures from the state party half a year after the 2012 elections.
-
Vigo County Jail Log: June 19, 2013
The following individuals were booked into the Vigo County Jail by area law enforcement on Tuesday and Wednesday, based on jail records.
-
Right lane of U.S. 41 South closed at Harlan Road
VIGO COUNTY, Ind. – An intersection improvement project on U.S. 41 and Harlan Road has closed the right lane for southbound traffic beginning today. This lane closure is scheduled to last about one month.
-
Terre Haute Coke & Carbon: Cleaning up a legacy
When heavy equipment starts moving dirt next week at the former Terre Haute Coke and Carbon industrial site, city officials hope a new day will be dawning for a long-neglected part of town.
-
Diversity growing: New census report shows changing face of Indiana
Like the rest of the nation, Indiana is continuing on a trend toward greater diversity as the numbers of Hispanics, blacks, Asians and other minorities are rising at a faster pace than whites.
-
Valley following diversity path of nation, Indiana
Like much of Indiana, the majority white population in the Wabash Valley is on the decline, while minority populations are on the increase.
-
Court lets walkout fines against House Democrats stand
House Democrats who had to pay more than $100,000 in fines after they walked out of the Indiana Statehouse two years ago during a legislative session won’t get the help they sought from the Indiana Supreme Court.
-
Arrest made, victim identified in Rosedale homicide
The victim in a Parke County homicide that occurred last week has been identified as Kathryn A. Bays, 55, of Rosedale.
-
Vermillion industrial park gets award for transition
The Vermillion Rise Mega Park, a former chemical weapons base now an industrial park north of Clinton, has gotten national attention for its rapid transition to civilian from military use.
-
Slight damage from evening storm
Very little damage was reported from a late evening storm that rolled through the Wabash Valley on Tuesday.
-
U.S. 41 lane restrictions
Motorists should expect delays because of lane restrictions on U.S. 41 in Sullivan County next week as a railroad company repairs a rail crossing 1.2 miles north of Shelburn.
-
Lane restrictions next week on U.S. 41 at Shelburn
SHELBURN, Ind. – Motorists should expect minimal delays because of lane restrictions for U.S. 41 in Sullivan County next week as the railroad company makes repairs to the rail crossing 1.2 miles north of Shelburn.
-
Reputed Mafioso tip triggers new Hoffa body search
OAKLAND TOWNSHIP, Mich. — The FBI saw enough merit in a reputed Mafia captain’s tip to once again break out the digging equipment to search for the remains of former Teamsters union leader Jimmy Hoffa, last seen alive before a lunch meeting with two mobsters nearly 40 years ago.
-
UPDATE: Parke County homicide victim identified
ROSEDALE — The victim in a Parke County homicide that occurred last week has been identified as Kathryn A. Bays, 55, of Rosedale.
-
Court lets walk-out fines against House Democrats stand
INDIANAPOLIS — House Democrats who had to pay more than $100,000 in fines after they walked out of the Indiana Statehouse won’t get the help they sought from the Indiana Supreme Court.
-
Vigo County Jail Log: June 18, 2013
The following individuals were booked into the Vigo County Jail by area law enforcement on Monday and Tuesday, based on jail records.
-
Back home again: Items from vaudeville stage and Terre Haute native sent to Historical Society
The staff at the Vigo County Historical Museum are excited about the arrival of priceless items used by Terre Haute-native Rose Fehrenbach and her husband, Edward Pierce, to promote their Vaudeville acts in the early 20th century.
-
Husband charged in Archer homicide
Terre Haute Police have found local reports of domestic violence between a Terre Haute man and his wife, whose body was discovered wrapped in a tarp and dumped in an Ohio ditch.
-
National Road panels dedicated
Rewind to the mid-1800s, when the trotting of a horse and buggy on National Road could be heard alongside the voices of people heading west, searching for opportunities.
-
Pence sets agency priorities
Following a directive from Gov. Mike Pence, state agency heads are reorganizing some of their top priorities to better reflect the first-year governor’s “roadmap for Indiana” plan for improving the state’s economy, infrastructure and health.
-
Another I-70 traffic snarl: Three injured in two related crashes
Three people were injured Monday afternoon from a pair of crashes on Interstate 70 that temporarily closed the highway and diverted traffic into Terre Haute.
-
Terre Haute man still hospitalized after scooter/car crash
A Terre Haute man remained hospitalized Monday at Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis after his scooter struck a car early Saturday on Wabash Avenue at 25th Street.
-
Overpass repairs causing Interstate 70 lane restrictions
Repairs to the Frye Road overpass in southeastern Vigo County has caused a restriction to the left lane of Interstate 70 between the 13- and 14-mile markers, about two miles east of the Indiana 46 exit.
-
Indiana woman condemned for killing at 15 is freed
A woman who was sentenced to death at age 16 for taking part in the torture and murder of a 78-year-old Bible studies teacher was released from an Indiana prison Monday after growing to middle age behind bars.
-
Grant will let Vigo Library evaluate map collection
The Vigo County Public Library has received a $2,000 grant to evaluate its historic map collection, a library official announced Monday.
-
Four juveniles caught on elementary school roof; one injured jumping off
Police say a juvenile was lucky to have suffered only a broken leg after jumping from the roof of a Vigo County elementary school – dropping about 30 feet to the ground.
-
Farmersburg man sentenced after guilty plea in rape case
A Farmersburg man has been sentenced to 12 years in prison after pleading guilty to a rape that occurred at his parents’ residence in May 2012.
-
Still no information being released on Rosedale homicide
No new information was being released Monday afternoon concerning a Rosedale homicide.
-
Woman condemned for killing at age 15 freed from Rockville prison
INDIANAPOLIS — A woman who was sentenced to death at age 16 for taking part in the torture and murder of a 78-year-old bible studies teacher was released from an Indiana prison today after growing to middle age behind bars.
-
UPDATE: All lanes of I-70 now open
All lanes of Interstate 70 in Vigo County are now open — as of 4:15 p.m. — after multiple crashes shut down the eastbound lanes temporarily this afternoon.
- More Local & Bistate Headlines
-
Holcomb, other top leaders leaving Indiana GOP helm




