Keeping a Constant Eye on Ebola
Matthew Rolfes /
In the age of the 24-hour twenty-four hour news cycle, our attention constantly shifts from topic to topic and from crisis to crisis. Various headlines and stories compete for our immediate attention, and some recede from public view before they receive the attention they should.
The most recent Ebola outbreak—a global health security crisis—seems to have been the latest casualty of our fast-paced news cycle. We hear little about it even though a quick Internet search will show new cases continue to emerge.
Globalization has integrated our world and expedited the sharing of cultures and ideas across the globe, but it also has increased our interaction with various pandemic and infectious diseases.
For this reason, we must remain focused on observing, planning, executing and sustaining operations to counter extremely aggressive and lethal diseases such as Ebola.
The Heritage Foundation has been engaged with the threat of Ebola since the first case of the lingering endemic was discovered in December 2013 in southeastern Guinea. By tracking Ebola and analyzing the reaction to the outbreak from the U.S. government and the international community, Heritage experts produced a detailed report that assessed U.S. actions and provided recommendations aimed at enhancing emergency preparedness and planning, domestic response efforts and medical training for people in deeply affected countries.
The report included a chronology of the outbreak, an overview of the transmission and an examination of the international humanitarian response that focused on the role of the World Health Organization and the U.S. military. Heritage also held a panel discussion underscoring the report’s major findings, including improving federal and state emergency medical preparedness and federal crisis communications.
Military officers representing the Chemical and Biological Defense and Medical Countermeasure Systems offices, the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research and the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases also shared the efforts of their respective organizations in a follow-on presentation and highlighted potential threats and challenges facing military medical research and development missions in the future.
Between these unique military observations and those underscored in “The Ebola Outbreak of 2013-2014: An Assessment of U.S. Actions,” Heritage offers recommendations that provide a blueprint for how to better protect America from future pandemics and bioterror crises.