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Pandemic Preparedness under Current POTUS |
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Technophobe
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Posted: June 24 2018 at 12:41am |
How Will Trump Lead During the Next Global Pandemic? “There is a real reason for us to be scared,” President Obama’s Ebola czar said. Jun 23 2018 The next global epidemic is likely around the corner—and no amount of U.S. retrenchment from globalization will halt that outbreak at the U.S. border. “There is a real reason for us to be scared of the idea of facing this threat with Donald Trump in the White House,”said Ron Klain, who served as President Obama’s Ebola czar, at the Aspen Ideas Festival, which is cohosted by The Aspen Institute and The Atlantic. Klain said the “president is anti-science” and “trades in conspiracy theories.” “All those things would lead to the loss of many lives in the event of an epidemic in the United States where we need the public not to trade in conspiracy theories, not to believe that the news was fake, but to respect scientific expertise,” said Klain, a veteran Democratic operative who served in both the Clinton and Obama administration. Klain added that Trump’s isolationist mindset has led to the U.S. pulling back from its leadership role in global health crises, which, he said, “is … going to be a serious threat to our security.” Klain called Trump’s policies and views “xenophobic, if not racist,” leading to the blaming of immigrants and foreigners for problems that need public-health interventions. Klain specifically cited Trump’s tweets in the midst of the Ebola outbreak when he advocated that American healthcare workers who had contracted the disease in Africa be barred from returning home. “People that go to far away places to help out are great-but must suffer the consequences!” Trump tweeted at the time. Global health-emergency preparedness has traditionally always been a bipartisan issue. Klain cited President George W. Bush’s much-lauded PEPFAR initiative, which committed the U.S. to taking a leadership role in tackling HIV/AIDS in Africa. During the 2014 Ebola outbreak, a Republican-controlled Congress authorized more than $6 billion to fight the outbreak. “We need leadership that is focused, that is pro-science, that doesn’t traffic in conspiracies, that invests in these things,” Klain said. Leadership “that doesn’t have these isolationist attitudes, [which] … put us all at risk.” Klain identified several large gaps in U.S. preparedness for the next global outbreak.
But the biggest gap, he said, is the global gap: “We can’t be safe here in America when there’s a risk of pandemics around the world,” Klain said. “The world’s just too small. Diseases spread too quickly. … There is no wall we can build that is high enough to keep viruses and the disease threat out of the United States. We have to engage in the world.” Source: https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2018/06/the-next-epidemic/563546/ |
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