[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 209 (Thursday, December 21, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8245-S8246]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PANDEMIC PREPAREDNESS
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, 2018 marks the 100-year anniversary of the
influenza pandemic that killed an estimated 50 million people,
including 670,000 Americans. I suspect most people assume that, given
the remarkable advances in modern medicine since 1918, nothing so
disastrous could happen again, but in fact, it could, and next time, it
could be even worse. The spread of infectious diseases and drug
resistance, and the accompanying threats to global security, are on the
rise, and the international community is woefully underprepared to
fight back.
The several large-scale infectious disease outbreaks of the last two
decades, including SARS, H1N1, and Ebola, have revealed the extent to
which individual countries and the international community at large
need to dramatically improve their preparedness to respond to such
potentially catastrophic health crises.
The stark reality is that the threat is increasing. An ever-growing,
increasingly mobile global population will provide the breeding ground
for the emergence and contagion of existing and new infectious
diseases.
The potential threats from infectious disease outbreaks include not
only catastrophic loss of life, but severe economic harm and social and
political instability. The 2014-15 Ebola outbreak, for example, which
began with the death of a 2-year-old boy in a remote Guinean village,
ultimately killed more than 11,000 people across six countries, left
thousands of children orphaned, caused an estimated economic loss to
those countries of nearly $3 billion, and resulted in many people
losing confidence in their country's public health system.
It is important to note that Ebola, which is spread through direct
contact and terrified millions of people including in this country, is
hardly the most infectious known disease. Several other disease agents,
such as measles and influenza, can be spread through the air and can
develop into epidemics or pandemics much more rapidly.
That is one of the reasons why many global health experts fear that
an infectious disease outbreak far worse than Ebola will occur sometime
in the next 20 years and that the number of outbreaks will become more
frequent.
Despite improvements in access to safe water and sanitation, vaccine
development, and other public health advances to combat infectious
diseases, an enormous amount of work remains.
One of the most important lessons learned from the Ebola outbreak is
that time is of the essence. The lack of a rapid, coordinated global
response resulted in many preventable deaths. Disease surveillance
systems were poor or nonexistent in the severely impacted countries,
there was a lack of trained personnel to rapidly deploy, and no
effective public communication system was in place to inform and update
local communities.
An additional problem was the inability to quickly mobilize
resources. Countries and NGOs around the globe lacked a reserve of
available funds. The Congress took a step toward addressing this issue
in the fiscal year 2017 State and foreign operations appropriations
bill, which included a $70 million emergency reserve fund to address
infectious disease outbreaks around the globe. In the fiscal year 2018
Senate version of the State and foreign operations bill, Chairman
Graham and I included $130 million for programs to prevent and respond
to such emerging health threats.
However, as I have said before and I will say again, far more needs
to be done to build the public health infrastructure to prevent and
respond to disease pandemics. As the international community works to
be more prepared for infectious disease outbreaks, the U.S. should
continue to play a leading role in preparedness planning.
Unfortunately, President Trump's fiscal year 2018 budget would cut
funding for these very programs, including for the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, which played an indispensable role in
responding to the Ebola and Zika outbreaks, as it has to many other
international health crises.
It is time we invest and prepare for pandemics in a similar way as we
invest and prepare for war, nuclear disasters, or other large-scale
threats to global security. The potential consequences are no less
serious. I urge
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the White House to face up to this reality and dramatically increase
funding for these programs at CDC, the U.S. Agency for International
Development, and other Federal agencies that play a role in global
health security.
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