USA TODAY International Edition

CDC: Zika virus ‘ not controllab­le’

Director describes obstacle of limited federal funding

- Alan Gomez @ alangomez USA TODAY

Agency faces hurdles of funding and technology

The director of the CenMIAMI ters for Disease Control and Prevention delivered a grim assessment Tuesday of the government’s ability to contain Zika, saying it’s too late to stop the dangerous virus from spreading throughout the United States.

“Zika and other diseases spread by ( the Aedes aegypti mosquito) are really not controllab­le with current technologi­es,” CDC Director Thomas Frieden said. “We will see this become endemic in the hemisphere.”

Speaking at the CityLab 2016 conference in this southern city, Frieden encouraged mayors and city officials in attendance to bolster mosquito control divisions, public health budgets and outreach to citizens to educate them about the looming threat.

Frieden said the federal government is hamstrung when responding to public health emergencie­s such as Zika, which can cause devastatin­g birth defects in babies born to women infected while pregnant.

He said his agency has cut back on several programs in order to respond to Zika, including HIV testing and immunizati­on.

“We had to take money from every state in the country and give it to the states that needed it more for Zika,” Frieden said. “We do the best we can with the cards we’re dealt. But this shows how really important it is that there is emergency funding.”

The CDC receives a $ 14 billion annual budget, but Congress only allows the agency to use $ 2.5 million to respond to emergencie­s, leading to the drastic cuts in several programs, Frieden said. By comparison, Frieden had nearly $ 40 million in emergency funds as commission­er of the New York City Health Department, he said. The Federal Emergency Management Agency, meanwhile, has broad discretion over its $ 13 billion annual budget.

The CDC, however, doesn’t have such flexibilit­y. The agency must seek congressio­nal approval anytime it responds to a public health emergency. The result: When Zika started reaching the U. S. this year, the CDC requested an emergency spending bill from Congress, but partisan bickering led to a months- long delay before a $ 1.1 billion bill passed last month.

“When there’s an earthquake or a tornado, FEMA doesn’t go to Congress and say, ‘ Would you give us money for this?’ ” Frieden said. “They have a fund.”

Frieden also said the best- case scenario for finding a vaccine for Zika is “two to three years” away.

The CDC director did have some encouragin­g news based on lessons learned in Miami- Dade County, the first and, so far, only U. S. county to experience local transmissi­on of the virus.

Frieden said the Wynwood neighborho­od of Miami, was able to remove itself from the active transmissi­on list in part through aerial spraying. The controvers­ial move wiped out the neighborho­od’s mosquito population nearly overnight, Frieden said.

 ?? JAMES GATHANY, CDC, VIA AP ?? The Zika virus is transmitte­d by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.
JAMES GATHANY, CDC, VIA AP The Zika virus is transmitte­d by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.

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