Imperial Valley Press

Action if Ebola spreads

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GENEVA (AP) — President Donald Trump’s top health official said Wednesday that the U.S. and global partners will “take the steps necessary” to try to contain a new Ebola outbreak, asserting that the fight against infectious diseases is one of the administra­tion’s top priorities for the World Health Organizati­on, the U.N. agency taking the lead.

Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar stopped short of predicting whether the outbreak in Congo that’s believed to have killed at least 27 people will be contained, but he praised WHO’s early response and vowed: “If it spreads, we will take further actions.” Azar’s comments on Ebola came in a wide-ranging interview with The Associated Press, which also touched on universal health care, U.S. prescripti­on-drug prices, and the recent revelation­s of a $1.2 million payout by Swiss drugs giant Novartis last year to Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen. Novartis, one of the world’s largest pharma companies, said Cohen was hired to advise on how the Trump administra­tion might approach health care policy. Experts have pointed out that Novartis needs FDA approval for the sale of its drugs and that company officials have spoken approvingl­y of rolling back the Obamaera Affordable Care Act, a Trump campaign promise largely unfulfille­d. “I don’t and won’t comment on the particular­s of any individual situation,” said Azar, a former executive with drugmaker Eli Lilly. “The president has talked about how extensivel­y ‘pharma’ generally spends money on lobbying. And we have said: You really don’t need to spend that money on lobbying because the president and the secretary have been very transparen­t about where we are going with drug prices: We’re going to lower drug prices in the United States,” he said.

The response to the Ebola outbreak by WHO and its director-general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, has emerged as a major concern as ministers like Azar and his counterpar­ts from other nations gather this week for the World Health Assembly in Geneva. The conclave lays out the agenda of the U.N. agency, which reaps hundreds of millions in U.S. funding each year. “I think it best not to make prediction­s when dealing with infectious disease,” Azar said cautiously, when asked if the outbreak will be contained. “We will take the steps necessary, we will act aggressive­ly, forcefully, in partnershi­p across the world community to do everything to contain it.” “I think that what we’re seeing is that we’re taking it very seriously from Day One,” he said. A day earlier, Azar told the Assembly the U.S. was committing an additional $7 million for the Ebola response, raising its total to $8 million. The WHO has launched a “strategic response plan” for itself and partner organizati­ons that seeks nearly $26 million to battle the outbreak, a figure that’s expected to rise. “We’re also grateful for other countries that have stepped up to the plate. And we hope others will do the same,” Azar added.

Azar said the “first and foremost mission” that the U.S. and the world community look to the WHO for is its “central role around infectious disease and emergency preparedne­ss and response.” Although he stressed the need for internatio­nal cooperatio­n in fighting Ebola, Azar also underscore­d a Trump administra­tion grievance: that other developed countries are “free riding off U.S. investment and innovation” in medicines and health care. The White House says countries that regulate the price of drugs contribute to higher costs in the U.S. and keep their own costs artificial­ly low. Azar said he delivered that message to his peers in Geneva.“It has been a thoughtful response,” he said, when asked about their reaction.

 ??  ?? In this May 11 file photo President Donald Trump speaks during an event about prescripti­on drug prices with Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. AP PhoTo/CArolyn KAsTer, FIle
In this May 11 file photo President Donald Trump speaks during an event about prescripti­on drug prices with Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. AP PhoTo/CArolyn KAsTer, FIle

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