Miami Herald

WHO chief calls Ebola outbreak a ‘crisis for peace’

- BY NICK CUMMING-BRUCE

GENEVA — The Ebola outbreak in West Africa is “unquestion­ably the most severe acute public health emergency in modern times,” Dr. Margaret Chan, the director general of the World Health Organizati­on, said Monday.

Chan, who dealt with the 2009 avian flu pandemic and the SARS outbreaks of 2002-03, said the Ebola outbreak had progressed from a public health crisis to “a crisis for internatio­nal peace and security.”

“I have never seen a health event threaten the very survival of societies and government­s in already very poor countries,” she said in a statement delivered on her behalf to a conference in Manila, Philippine­s, and released by her office in Geneva. “I have never seen an infectious disease contribute so strongly to potential state failure.”

More than 4,000 people have died from the Ebola virus, all but a handful of them in the West African nations of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, according to WHO estimates issued last week. Chan declined to expand on those figures because they were still rising “exponentia­lly.”

Instead, Chan drew a number of lessons from the outbreak. Most notably, she emphasized “the dangers of the world’s growing social and economic inequaliti­es.”

“The rich get the best care,” she said. “The poor are left to die.”

Ebola emerged 40 years ago, and, Chan said, there were no vaccines or other remedies because it has traditiona­lly been confined to poor African countries. A profit-driven pharmaceut­ical industry had no incentive to make products for countries that could not pay, she said.

The risks of neglecting health care in developing countries are global, Chan said, adding that “when a deadly and dreaded virus hits the destitute and spirals out of control, the whole world is put at risk.”

Moreover, she said, inadequate health care means that the kind of shocks the world is experienci­ng with greater frequency could “bring a fragile country to its knees.”

A second lesson drawn from the crisis was that “rumors and panic are spreading faster than the virus, and this costs money,” Chan said, noting a World Bank estimate that 90 percent of the economic costs of any outbreak “come from irrational and disorganiz­ed efforts of the public to avoid infection.” The final message she wanted to deliver, however, was that “the world is ill-prepared to respond to any severe, sustained and threatenin­g health emergency.”

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