San Francisco Chronicle

Warren offers plan to confront infectious illness

- By Will Weissert Will Weissert is an Associated Press writer.

DES MOINES, Iowa — Democratic presidenti­al candidate Elizabeth Warren has announced a plan to prevent, contain and treat infectious diseases as a new viral illness spreads in China.

The Massachuse­tts senator on Tuesday unveiled a plan that includes fully funding the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s pandemic prevention and response programs. The agency has faced stiff budget cuts under President Trump, including to emergency funds and global health programs that were establishe­d following West Africa’s Ebola epidemic in 2014.

“Like so much else, Trump’s approach to keeping us safe from disease outbreaks is a mess,” Warren wrote in an online post announcing the plan. “But when he’s gone, we can fix it.”

Warren’s proposal comes as the coronaviru­s has killed more than 100 people in China and the city at the center of the crisis, Wuhan, remains on lockdown. The U.S. has confirmed cases in Washington state, Illinois, Southern California and Arizona.

The timing of Warren’s announceme­nt was no accident — nor is the fact that she’s the candidate drawing up the proposal. During more than a year of campaignin­g, Warren has embraced the reputation of having “a plan” for nearly everything. She remains bunched near the top of the polls with former Vice President Joe Biden, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigeig.

Warren blamed the Trump administra­tion for proposing “billions in cuts to the agencies responsibl­e for fighting and preventing pandemics, a devastatin­g blow that would put lives at risk.” Not all of those reductions have been approved by Congress, though.

She also promised to push the CDC to develop vaccines against infectious diseases, including a universal immunizati­on against the flu. But it is the National Institutes of Health that has already made a priority of developing a better flu vaccine.

Warren said she can mitigate the spread of disease by fighting climate change and moving the U.S. to a universal, government­funded health system under the “Medicare for All” program. She also wants to increase NIH funding by $100 billion.

Although such a high price tag may make it difficult to survive the appropriat­ions process, Warren plans to help with the funding by creating a “swear jar.” That would be a pot of money requiring private companies to pay some of their profits from publicly funded research back to the NIH.

 ?? Mandel Ngan / AFP via Getty Images ?? Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s proposal comes as the coronaviru­s has killed more than 100 people in China. The U.S. has confirmed cases in Washington state, Illinois, California and Arizona.
Mandel Ngan / AFP via Getty Images Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s proposal comes as the coronaviru­s has killed more than 100 people in China. The U.S. has confirmed cases in Washington state, Illinois, California and Arizona.

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