In the midst

Missing.

No quick dispatching of disease investigators. No televised news conference to inform the public. No timely health alerts to doctors.

In the midst of a hantavirus outbreak that involves Americans and is making headlines around the world, the U.S. government’s top public health agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has been uncharacteristically missing in action, according to a number of experts.

That, of course, is because Trump and Evil Kennedy have gutted it.

“The CDC is not even a player,” said Lawrence Gostin, an international public health expert at Georgetown University. “I’ve never seen that before.”

At their first briefing, held Saturday by telephone only for invited reporters, officials pledged to be transparent in updating the public but said the media could not cite the speakers by name under rules set by aides to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. They did not directly answer a question about whether the American passengers could leave the university medical facility when they wanted.

The CDC’s diminished role in this outbreak is an indicator the agency is no longer the force in international health or the protector of domestic health that it once was, some experts said.

Is that how we make America great again?

The hantavirus outbreak is “a sentinel event” that speaks to “how well the country is prepared for a disease threat. And right now, I’m very sorry to say that we are not prepared,” said Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, chief executive officer of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

And we’re not prepared because that’s how Evil Kennedy wants it and because Trump does not care.

For decades, the CDC partnered with the WHO in such situations. The CDC acted as a mainstay of any international investigation, providing staff and expertise to help unravel any outbreak mystery, develop ways to control it and communicate to the public what they should know and how they should worry.

Such actions were a large reason why the CDC developed a reputation as the world’s premier public health agency.

And Trump and Kendoll just threw that away, because they are destructive and brainless.

The administration has laid off thousands of CDC scientists and public health professionals, including members of the agency’s ship sanitation program.

As this was playing out, Kennedy said he was working to “restore the CDC’s focus on infectious disease, invest in innovation, and rebuild trust through integrity and transparency.”

By getting rid of thousands of its scientists and health professionals. My trust is not rebuilt.

Comments

2 responses to “In the midst”

  1. Athel Cornish-Bowden Avatar
    Athel Cornish-Bowden

    Just to reassure you that Trump and Kennedy are not the only idiots making bad decisions in the light of the Hantavirus story. A plane was sent to take the French passengers from the cruise ship from Tenerife to Paris, and one of them started showing Hantavirus symptoms during the flight. We have known since the middle ages, and maybe since the ancient Greeks, that crowding a group of potential infection sources into a small space is not a good idea, but apparently that is too complex an idea for the people who organized the flight.

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