Could Ebola be the next AIDS? Tom Frieden, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), seems to think it’s a possibility.
“I will say that in the 30 years that I have been working in public health, the only thing like this has been AIDS,” Frieden said Thursday at the annual meeting of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank in Washington, D.C. “We have to work now so that this is not the world’s next AIDS.”
Frieden’s remarks came one day after the death of Thomas Eric Duncan, the first patient diagnosed with Ebola in the United States. The 42-year-old Liberian resident was being treated at Dallas’s Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, which is now under scrutiny for the level of care it provided.
“We’ve now had exactly one patient diagnosed with Ebola for the first time in this country, and he is the one patient treated for Ebola in this country who has died,” msnbc’s Rachel Maddow said Wednesday. “How did we do on this test as a country? How badly did we screw this up?”
A spokesperson for Texas Health Presbyterian defended the hospital on Thursday, telling NBC News that Duncan “was treated the way any other patient would have been treated, regardless of nationality or ability to pay for care.”
No other cases of Ebola have yet been diagnosed on U.S. soil. But in West Africa, the outbreak continues to spiral out of control. The current Ebola epidemic has claimed the lives of more than 3,800 people, mainly in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone, according to the World Health Organization. At the IMF/World Bank meeting Thursday, West African leaders called on the international community for help.
“Our people are dying,” Sierra Leone President Ernst Bai Koroma said. “Without your quick response, a tragedy unforeseen in modern times will threaten the well-being and compromise the security of people everywhere.”
The U.S. is sending up to 4,000 military personnel to West Africa as part of a mission to stop the disease’s deadly march. And at the meeting Thursday, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon called for a 20-fold surge in international aid. Later in the day, NBC News learned that the first trial of an Ebola vaccine started with three health care workers in Mali. It’ll be months before any vaccine could be available, but experts say the trials in Africa mark an important first step.








