The Ebola epidemic
Pulitzer-prize
winning writer of The Coming Plague warns, ‘you are not nearly
scared enough about Ebola’
“Experimental drugs and airport
screenings will do nothing to stop this plague. If Ebola hits Lagos,
we’re in real trouble,” warns Pulitzer-prize winning writer of The
Coming Plague, Laurie Garrett
August
2014 – AFRICA –
Attention World: You just don’t get it. You think there are magic
bullets in some rich country’s freezers that will instantly stop
the relentless spread of the Ebola virus in West Africa? You think
airport security guards in Los Angeles can look a traveler in the
eyes and see infection, blocking that jet passenger’s entry into
La-la-land? You believe novelist Dan Brown’s utterly absurd
description of a World Health Organization that has a private C5-A
military transport jet and disease SWAT team that can swoop into
outbreaks, saving the world from contagion? Wake up, fools. What’s
going on in West Africa now isn’t Brown’s silly Inferno scenario
— it’s Steven Soderberg’s movie Contagion, though without a
modicum of its high-tech capacity. Last week, my brilliant Council on
Foreign Relations colleague John Campbell, former U.S. ambassador to
Nigeria, warned that spread of the virus inside Lagos — which has a
population of 22 million — would instantly transform this situation
into a worldwide crisis, thanks to the chaos, size, density, and
mobility of not only that city but dozens of others in the enormous,
oil-rich nation. Add
to the Nigerian scenario civil war, national elections, Boko Haram
terrorists, and a country-wide doctors’ strike — all of which are
real and current — and you have a scenario so overwrought and
frightening that I could not have concocted it even when I advised
screenwriter Scott Burns on his Contagion script.
Inside the United States, politicians, gadflies, and much of the
media are focused on wildly experimental drugs and vaccines, and
equally wild notions of “keeping the virus out” by barring
travelers and “screening at airports.
Since
the Ebola outbreak began in March there have been many reports of
isolated cases of the disease in travelers to other countries. None
have resulted, so far, in secondary spread, establishing new epidemic
focuses of the disease. As I write this, such a case is thought to
have occurred Johannesburg, South Africa’s largest city, and
another suspected case reportedly died in isolation in Jeddah, Saudi
Arabia, prompting the kingdom to issue special Ebola warnings for the
upcoming hajj. It’s only a matter of time before one of these
isolated cases spreads, possibly in a chaotic urban center far larger
than the ones in which it is now claiming lives: Conakry, Guinea;
Monrovia, Liberia; and Freetown, Sierra Leone. So what does “getting
it” mean for understanding what we, as a global community, must now
do? First of all, we must appreciate the scale of need on the ground
in the three Ebola-plagued nations. While the people may pray for
magic bullets, their health providers are not working in Hollywood,
but rather in some of the most impoverished places on Earth. Before
Ebola, these countries spent less than $100 per year per capita on
healthcare. Most Americans spend more than that annually on aspirin
and ibuprofen. “It’s like fighting a forest fire: leave behind
one burning ember, one case undetected, and the epidemic could
re-ignite,” Frieden recently told Congress. “Ending this
outbreak will take time, at least three to six months in a best case
scenario, but this is very far from a best case scenario.”At the
same congressional hearing Dr. Frank Glover, a medical missionary who
partners with SIM, a Christian missions organization, and president
of SHIELD, a U.S.-based NGO in Africa, warned that Liberia had less
than 200 doctors struggling to meet the health needs of 4 million
people before the epidemic. “After the outbreak that number went
down to about 50 doctors involved in clinical care,” said Glover. I
myself have received emails from physicians in these countries,
describing the complete collapse of all non-Ebola care, from
unassisted deliveries to untended auto accident injuries. People
aren’t just dying of the virus, but from every imaginable medical
issue a system of care usually faces.
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