Home
Help

Boston Globe Extranet

Sections
Boston Globe Online: Page One
Nation | World
Metro | Region
Business
Sports
Living | Arts
Editorials

Weekly
Health | Science (Tue.)
Food (Wed.)
Calendar (Thu.)
Life at Home (Thu.)

Sunday
Automotive
Focus
Learning
Real Estate
Travel

Local news
City Weekly
Globe South
Globe West
North Weekly
NorthWest Weekly
New Hampshire

Features
Globe archives
Book Reviews
Book Swap
Columns
Comics
Crossword
Horoscopes
Death Notices
Lottery
Movie Reviews
Music Reviews
NetWatch weblog
Obituaries
Special Reports
Today's stories A-Z
TV & Radio
Weather

Classifieds
Autos
BostonWorks
Real Estate
Place an Ad


Buy a Globe photo

Help
Contact the Globe
Send us feedback

Alternative views
Low-graphics version
Acrobat version (.pdf)

Search the Globe:

Today
Yesterday


The Boston Globe OnlineBoston.com Boston Globe Online / Keeping Safe
Hazmat teams
Haz-mat response teams have been kept busy at postal sites in Trenton, N.J. (AFP Photo)
   How genuine is the risk of anthrax?
(By Gareth Cook, Globe Staff)
Most Americans are experiencing the symptoms of an epidemic: fear. The most powerful antidote to fear is information, but the central questions of the moment are tough ones. How safe am I? How safe is my family?


P R O T E C T I N G    Y O U R S E L F


AT HOME
Taking practical steps
(By Alice Dembner, Globe Staff)
Forget the gas mask and hold off buying antibiotics. Unless your work puts you directly in the line of danger, common sense and vigilance may be your best defense.
      AT WORK
Staying safe on the job
(By Diane Lewis, Globe Staff)
Companies can help anxious employees feel more confident by listening to workers' concerns, developing contingency plans, and providing security measures.


C O P I N G
ANXIETY
Handling a new kind of stress
(By Patricia Wen, Globe Staff)
Just how do Americans, hit with 'round-the-clock news flashes about terrorism threats and anthrax cases, keep their psyches in a healthy emotional balance?
Signs you need help

PARENTING
Talking with kids
(By Barbara Meltz, Globe Staff)
Figuring out how to help children is complicated, not just because adults themselves are confused but because children's signals can be tricky to read.
What you should say

    I N F E C T I O N
Flu
Although millions weather it just fine, the flu is mostly a danger to the elderly. (Globe Photo/Getty Images)

SYMPTOMS
Is it just the flu?
How anthrax is diagnosed

TREATMENTS
How the body fights back
Inside a bacterial invasion

PUBLIC HEALTH
Assessing hospital readiness


B I O W A R F A R E


BEYOND ANTHRAX
Are there other threats?
(By David Abel, Globe Staff)
Unlike nuclear weapons, which require a lot of money, material, and expertise, many bioweapons are easily produced. They can also be used stealthily.
      ASSESSING DANGER
Not all threats are equal
(By David Abel, Globe Staff)
There's a certain logic to terrorism: maximizing destruction, provoking panic, and killing as many people as possible. Using that logic, certain targets are of more concern.


T H E    M A I L



A microbiologist tests a suspicious package for anthrax in Jacksonville, Fla. (AP Photo)
   PROCEDURES
What to do if in doubt
(By Beth Daley, Globe Staff)
Overwhelmed with thousands of phone calls and items to be tested for anthrax spores, authorities have outlined a specific set of questions you should run through before dialing 911 if you are confronted by a suspicious package or letter.
Identifying a mail threat