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Weekly Address: President Obama – What you need to know about Ebola

The President’s Weekly Address post is also an Open News Thread. Feel free to share other news stories in the comments.

 

From the White HouseWeekly Address

In this week’s address, the President discussed what the United States is doing to respond to Ebola, both here at home and abroad, and the key facts Americans need to know. There is no country better prepared to confront the challenge Ebola poses than the U.S. and although even one case here at home is too many, the country is not facing an outbreak of the disease. Our medical professionals tell us Ebola is difficult to catch, and is only transmitted through direct contact with the bodily fluids of someone who is showing symptoms.

The President made clear that he and his entire administration will continue to do everything possible to prevent further transmission of the disease domestically, and to contain and end the Ebola epidemic at its source in West Africa.

Transcript: Weekly Address: What You Need To Know About Ebola

Today, I want to take a few minutes to speak with you-directly and clearly-about Ebola: what we’re doing about it, and what you need to know.  Because meeting a public health challenge like this isn’t just a job for government.  All of us-citizens, leaders, the media-have a responsibility and a role to play.  This is a serious disease, but we can’t give in to hysteria or fear-because that only makes it harder to get people the accurate information they need. We have to be guided by the science.  We have to remember the basic facts.

First, what we’re seeing now is not an “outbreak” or an “epidemic” of Ebola in America.  We’re a nation of more than 300 million people.  To date, we’ve seen three cases of Ebola diagnosed here-the man who contracted the disease in Liberia, came here and sadly died; the two courageous nurses who were infected while they were treating him.  Our thoughts and our prayers are with them, and we’re doing everything we can to give them the best care possible.  Now, even one infection is too many.  At the same time, we have to keep this in perspective.  As our public health experts point out, every year thousands of Americans die from the flu.

Second, Ebola is actually a difficult disease to catch.  It’s not transmitted through the air like the flu.  You cannot get it from just riding on a plane or a bus.  The only way that a person can contract the disease is by coming into direct contact with the bodily fluids of somebody who is already showing symptoms.  I’ve met and hugged some of the doctors and nurses who’ve treated Ebola patients.  I’ve met with an Ebola patient who recovered, right in the Oval Office.  And I’m fine.

Third, we know how to fight this disease.  We know the protocols.  And we know that when they’re followed, they work.  So far, five Americans who got infected with Ebola in West Africa have been brought back to the United States-and all five have been treated safely, without infecting healthcare workers.

And this week, at my direction, we’re stepping up our efforts.  Additional CDC personnel are on the scene in Dallas and Cleveland.  We’re working quickly to track and monitor anyone who may have been in close contact with someone showing symptoms.  We’re sharing lessons learned so other hospitals don’t repeat the mistakes that happened in Dallas.  The CDC’s new Ebola rapid response teams will deploy quickly to help hospitals implement the right protocols.  New screening measures are now in place at airports that receive nearly all passengers arriving from Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.  And we’ll continue to constantly review our measures, and update them as needed, to make sure we’re doing everything we can to keep Americans safe.

Finally, we can’t just cut ourselves off from West Africa, where this disease is raging.  Our medical experts tell us that the best way to stop this disease is to stop it at its source-before it spreads even wider and becomes even more difficult to contain.  Trying to seal off an entire region of the world-if that were even possible-could actually make the situation worse.  It would make it harder to move health workers and supplies back and forth.  Experience shows that it could also cause people in the affected region to change their travel, to evade screening, and make the disease even harder to track.

So the United States will continue to help lead the global response in West Africa.  Because if we want to protect Americans from Ebola here at home, we have to end it over there. And as our civilian and military personnel serve in the region, their safety and health will remain a top priority.

As I’ve said before, fighting this disease will take time.  Before this is over, we may see more isolated cases here in America.  But we know how to wage this fight.  And if we take the steps that are necessary, if we’re guided by the science-the facts, not fear-then I am absolutely confident that we can prevent a serious outbreak here in the United States, and we can continue to lead the world in this urgent effort.

Bolding added.

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4 comments

  1. And if we shut out those who deny science but who have become “experts” on how to address this public health crisis … people, sadly, from both parties.

    I am glad that adults are in charge of the response.  

  2. princesspat

    Ebola would not be as scary had GOP funded vaccine research

    ……Dr. Francis Collins, head of the National Institutes of Health said the NIH has been working toward that goal since 2001 and would have gotten there, if not for one thing.

    “Frankly, if we had not gone through our 10-year slide in research support, we probably would have had a vaccine in time for this [outbreak] that would’ve gone through clinical trials and would have been ready,” Collins told the Huffington Post.

    Why, you may ask, did the NIH not have the money to do the work that, Collins, said, “would have made all the difference?” Easy answer: Republican budget-cutting fanatics in Congress have held down funding for the NIH and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for a more than a decade.

  3. 4 Pieces Of Good News About Ebola That Have Gotten Lost In The Hysteria

    1. Nigeria and Senegal have both officially defeated Ebola.

    On Monday, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared Nigeria free of Ebola, now that the country has gone more than 40 days without reporting any new cases of the deadly virus. “This is a spectacular success story,” WHO spokesperson Rui Gama Vaz said at a news conference in Nigeria’s capital city, Abuja. “It shows that Ebola can be contained.” […]

    2. Dozens of people in Texas just learned they’re no longer at risk for contracting Ebola.

    This weekend, the New York Times reported that “at least one chapter of the Ebola saga” has approached a close. That’s because Sunday marked the end of the 21-day monitoring period for nearly all of the people in Texas who came into contact with Thomas Duncan, the Liberian man who recently died from Ebola in a Dallas hospital. None of them have gotten the virus, so the threat of transmission from Duncan has now officially passed. […]

    3. The first person to contract Ebola outside of Africa has survived the virus.

    Also on Sunday, the Spanish government announced that a health worker who contracted Ebola from sick patients has been cleared of the virus after testing negative for the third time. Teresa Romero was hospitalized for Ebola on October 6 after caring for missionaries who had contracted Ebola abroad; at that time, she was the first person to contract Ebola outside of Africa, leading to significant alarm about the potential spread of the disease. […]

    4. The health worker on the so-called “Ebola cruise” has tested negative for the virus.

    Last week, there were some panicked headlines about the fact that one of the hospital workers who treated Duncan was on a cruise ship bound for the Caribbean. The employee, who had handled a specimen from the Ebola-stricken patient, said she left for the vacation before she was aware she was supposed to isolate herself.

    But the alarms raised should continue to encourage help for Africa:

    While Europe and the U.S. can celebrate some small pieces of good news about Ebola, however, the epidemic continues to ravage countries like Liberia and Sierra Leone, where more than 4,000 people have died so far. Despite the fears about Ebola reaching the borders of developed nations, international assistance to the impoverished West African region has been slow to come. In an impassioned “letter to the world” broadcast on BBC on Sunday, Liberia’s president warned that West Africa is at risk of losing an entire generation to the disease.

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