I led the U.S. CDC response to the 2014 Ebola epidemic
2 hours ago
- #public health crisis
- #global health response
- #Ebola outbreak
- The current Ebola outbreak in the DRC had about 400-500 suspected cases by the response start, far surpassing the 40-50 in West Africa in 2014.
- The response is struggling with insufficient contact tracing, laboratory backlogs, lack of ready treatment centers, and attacks on burial teams.
- Ebola containment requires meticulous efforts like contact tracing, quarantine, and rapid isolation, with supportive care saving lives despite no proven treatment or vaccine for this strain.
- Experienced local health workers in DRC and Uganda need surge support including clinicians, labs, and community funding to manage the outbreak's scale.
- The U.S. response should focus on stopping the outbreak at its source through immediate CDC and USAID support, as travel restrictions alone are imperfect.
- The CDC and global health infrastructure have been weakened, with staff losses, leadership gaps, and reduced funding, hindering outbreak response capacity.
- A stronger WHO, rebuilt CDC, and global collaboration are essential to detect and stop outbreaks faster, preventing future pandemics.