Author Topic: Major Zika fail! Feds busted for 'lazy' response  (Read 482 times)

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Major Zika fail! Feds busted for 'lazy' response
« on: May 02, 2016, 09:00:51 am »
Major Zika fail! Feds busted for 'lazy' response
Agency obsessed with 'salt, alcohol, guns, football' but 'forgot to protect us from diseases'
Published: 12 hours ago

 

Just two years after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention scrambled to respond to cases of Ebola in the United States, the federal organization is now admitting it initially underestimated the threat posed by the Zika virus in the United States, leaving one expert to call for a major restructuring of the organization.

News of the Zika virus emerged earlier this year, when cases in Brazil, particularly among pregnant women, were reported in increasing numbers. While the impact of Zika on adults and children is still being studied, medical experts have concluded the virus causes shrinking of the skulls in unborn babies, which leads to other serious health challenges.

At the start of the year, officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, implored everyone to remain calm, stressing that mosquitoes carrying Zika could appear in the U.S. but the threat here is much lower than in Latin America.

Now, as the Obama administration presses for a $1.9 billion emergency response to Zika, the CDC’s Zika preview is much more serious.

“Everything we look at with this virus seems to be a bit scarier than we initially thought,” said CDC Principal Deputy Director Dr. Anne Schuchat.

For experts, that big of a shift is unacceptable.

“That’s not the kind of quote that you want from a government agency that is charged with protecting the citizens from infectious diseases,” said Dr. Tom Borelli, who earned degrees in microbiology and biochemistry and frequently writes on the impact of a bloated federal government and is now calling for Congress to restructure the CDC.

Get the stunning e-book free from WND, “Emerging Diseases,” by Jane Orient, M.D.

He told WND and Radio America that getting caught unprepared is becoming routine for the CDC.

“The CDC should not be surprised about epidemics. First it was Ebola in 2014. Now in 2016 we have the Zika virus. Who knows what’s next?” said Borelli, who said the CDC has evidence as early as 2008 that Zika could be transmitted through sexual activity.

Borelli said the CDC started giving a more sober assessment of the Zika threat when new studies showed the mosquitoes carrying the disease could migrate to 40 of the 50 states. He said a more focused agency would have been on top of this, but the CDC has too many unnecessary irons in the fire.

“The CDC has been suffering its own disease of mission creep. They’ve gotten into everything from salt, e-cigarettes, alcohol, guns, football injuries. You name it, they’re doing it. But they forgot about one of founding principles on which they were created, which is to protect us from infectious diseases. They took the eye off the ball,” said Borelli, who notes the CDC receives about $7 billion a year from taxpayers.

So what would have been a competent response?

“First of all, they would have known that it would represent a public health risk if it did get to the United States,” Borelli said. “Then, kind of like Ebola, what you do is make sure you can keep it contained and help Brazil out to keep the disease contained there. And you implement procedures and methodologies to contain the mosquitoes. But they didn’t.”

Listen to the WND/Radio America interview with Dr. Tom Borelli:

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2016/05/major-zika-fail-feds-busted-for-lazy-response/#z3P0wJeTHhZEtjb5.99