STUDENT A's QUESTIONS (Do not show these to Student B.)
(1) | How concerned are you about avian bird flu? |
(2) | What do you know about avian bird flu? |
(3) | Do you think the world is treating the threat seriously enough? |
(4) | Influenza killed up to 40 million people in 1918. Do you think avian bird flu could be as deadly? |
(5) | What is your government doing to protect your country? |
(6) | What do you think is the best way to avoid the avian bird flu virus? |
(7) | Do you think world governments and agencies are coordinated enough in fighting avian bird flu? |
(8) | Has your government provided a lot of information to help you understand avian bird flu? |
(9) | Does your country import live chickens? |
(10) | Do you think you might become suspicious of flocks of wild birds? |
STUDENT B's QUESTIONS (Do not show these to Student A.)
(1) | What would you do if a human-to-human strain found its way into your country? |
(2) | Do you think your country has enough vaccines to cope with a pandemic? |
(3) | What would you do if your neighbour had avian bird flu? |
(4) | Avian bird flu has killed relatively few people. Are people over-reacting to the dangers? |
(5) | Do you know what the symptoms of avian bird flu are? |
(6) | Would you travel to countries which have had reported cases of avian bird flu? |
(7) | Do you think avian bird flu will disappear the way the SARS virus disappeared? |
(8) | How can a government stop the virus from entering the country? |
(9) | Will you now think twice about eating chicken? |
(10) | Would you ever eat raw chicken or raw eggs? |