WHO Announces List Of Eight Diseases That May Spark Public Health Emergency

WHO Announces List Of Eight Diseases That May Spark Public Health Emergency

The World Health Organization recently released a list of eight diseases most likely to spark a public health emergency. Some we know, like the hemorrhagic fevers Ebola, Lassa, and Marburg, which can cause their victims to bleed out from their gums and eyes.

But further down on the WHO list was a threat ominously described as “disease X.” The X stands for an unknown: a pathogen lurking out there, currently being harbored in animals, with the potential to make the dangerous leap into humans and spread suffering and death around the globe.

While disease X may sound like something that makes you want to run and hug a stuffed animal, it’s exactly the thing public health officials are bracing for. “We don’t know where the next threat will come from,” former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Tom Frieden told Vox. “But we are certain there will be a next time.”

What’s really worrying right now is that we’re not ready for the “next time.” Current proposals from the Trump White House would slash funding for foreign aid and US public health agencies. And that is expected to have a ripple effect around the world.

In the best of times, predicting the next outbreak is a fool’s game: No one could have seen H1N1, a.k.a. “swine flu,” emerging from Mexico or Ebola turning up in West Africa. But these are not the best of times.

While it’s true that America has long been underprepared for a pandemic, the risks right now appear to be especially high. Many signs point to the US retreating from supporting the global and public health efforts that can prevent epidemics like Lassa fever (which has, since January, been linked with 913 suspected cases and 73 deaths in Nigeria) or the unknown disease X. Here’s why.

America has played a major role in stopping pandemics globally — but many signs point to the US retreating.

It’s not an exaggeration to say that with each passing day, the threat that one of those outbreaks turns into a pandemic increases. As humans travel and urbanize in ever greater volumes, mingling in unprecedented ways with the animals that harbor disease, we help viruses, bacteria, and fungi spread around the world with greater effectiveness and speed.

Countries can’t isolate themselves from the flow of diseases across borders, and fighting and preventing pandemics requires cross-border collaboration and cooperation. They need to share information transparently about outbreaks within their borders. They need to agree on plans to prevent and fight those outbreaks.

Historically, America has been a global leader in this regard. The US government has the single largest footprint of any country in global health when it comes to money contributed. Poorer countries rely on the world’s wealthiest for both financial backing and technical expertise to do everything from building disease surveillance networks to identifying and containing outbreaks.

This work is carried out directly by USAID, the CDC, and the Department of Defense, as well as by the WHO, to which the US is the largest country donor (and to which the CDC sends its experts).

In the past decade, the WHO has declared four global health emergencies. Two of them occurred within the space of two years: the Ebola epidemic in 2014 and the Zika epidemic in 2016.

But these are far from the only threats the WHO has been dealing with. All told, the WHO’s executive director, Peter Salama, told Vox, “Over the course of the last five years, we responded to 1,000 outbreaks.”

And US government officials, many of them from the CDC, have helped the WHO fight these outbreaks — from Ebola all over Africa to plague in Madagascar. “This is a daily working together,” said Salama.

But that collaboration is under threat right now, both financially and conceptually.

Most notably, the Trump administration proposed in its fiscal year 2019 budget to cut funding for the CDC by 20 percent, from $7.2 billion to $5.7 billion. If passed by Congress, that would bring the CDC back to its lowest level of funding since 2003.

“To go back to 2003 is really quite disturbing,” said John Auerbach, president, and CEO of the public health nonprofit the Trust for America’s Health. “That was before we’ve seen the likelihood of what we used to consider very unusual emergencies — like significant weather emergencies and novel viruses creating epidemics that have now become almost routine.”

There’s also no sign that the $1 billion pot of money Congress gave USAID and the CDC in 2015 to fight Ebola in West Africa — and help poorer countries around the world build up their disease detection and prevention systems — is going to be replenished after it’s slated to run out in 2019.

That has already prompted these agencies to plan a retreat from 39 of the 49 foreign countries they’re working in, the Wall Street Journal and Washington Post reported.

This work abroad, as Ed Yong reported at the Atlantic, has involved critical pandemic prevention efforts, like training disease detectives in Liberia, cutting outbreak response times in Cameroon, and building emergency operations centers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

“There is a growing worry about a fiscal cliff of funding [at the CDC], with no clear signal that more will come,” said Jennifer Kates, director of global health and HIV policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “There’s a question mark about the CDC’s ability going forward to keep the efforts up that are needed due to preparedness, let alone any [outbreak] response, around the world.”

Kates noted that while the 2019 budget called for a $51 million increase to the CDC for global health security over 2017 levels, that came in the context of the overall CDC budget slashing and cuts to other global health line items.

“America First” doesn’t work during pandemics

More broadly, the Trump administration has repeatedly signaled that it’s not interested in supporting international development and foreign aid. In its most recent budget proposal, for the fiscal year 2019, the administration also proposed slashing funding for the State Department and USAID by a quarter.

This “America First” worldview does not bode well for necessary international collaboration in global health, as Bill Gates wrote in his recent annual letter.

“My view is that engaging with the world has proven over time to benefit everyone, including Americans, more than withdrawing does,” Gates said. Foreign aid, he added, makes “Americans more secure by making poor countries more stable and stopping disease outbreaks before they become pandemics.”

There’s also the question of public health leadership in the US right now. With a number of embarrassing fiascos among the Trump appointees in charge of public health, the US has felt rudderless from a health leadership perspective, Donald McNeil Jr. pointed out recently at the New York Times:

[Trump’s] first secretary for Health and Human Services, Tom Price, resigned in disgrace last September after it was revealed that he spent $400,000 chartering private jets at taxpayer expense.

The president’s choice for C.D.C. director, Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald, resigned in January after reports that she had recently bought stock in a tobacco company. That capped months of recusing herself from various official duties because she owned shares in biotech and health-information companies.

Frieden is bracing for what happens next. “Obviously, who they appoint as the next CDC director is an important bellwether of their commitment to public health,” he said. “But it’s not a good sign that they proposed [a] more than 20 percent cut to the CDC’s budget; that would bring the CDC back to the lowest level since 2003.”

Source : https://secretsofaidsandebola.blogspot.nl/

 

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