The head of the United Nations Mission for Ebola Emergency Response (UNMEER) said Tuesday that he was “deeply, deeply worried” the combined international efforts of late will not be enough to stop the epidemic.
RELATED: Ebola takes toll on NYC’s “Little Liberia”
“Ebola got a head start on us,” Anthony Banbury, head of UNMEER, told the members of the UN Security Council Tuesday. “It is far ahead of us, it is running faster than us, and it is winning the race.”
In order to turn the tide, Banbury identified four targets that must be met: identifying and tracing contacts, managing cases, ensuring safe burials, and providing people with information they can use to better protect themselves. He also set a 60-day deadline to ensure that 70% of infected people are in care facilities, and 70% of burials are done without causing further infection.
Ebola is spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of a person who is symptomatic — a transmission process that makes people caring for the sick or the deceased particularly vulnerable.
“If we fail at any of these, we fail entirely,” said Banbury of the stated objectives. “With each passing day as more people are infected, the number of people infected grows exponentially.”
Banbury’s remarks echo those of President Obama and Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), who have both called for a stronger response to Ebola at home and abroad. Frieden said Tuesday the CDC was setting up teams for hospitals treating Ebola patients that could be deployed “within hours” of any new cases in the U.S. So far, added Frieden, the CDC has not identified the specific breach in protocol that led to a Dallas nurse’s infection — the second diagnosed case of Ebola in the U.S., and the first person-to-person transmission.
The nurse, identified as 26-year-old Nina Pham, said Tuesday she was “doing well” in a statement released by the Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, where she is receiving treatment.
Photo Essay: Ebola continues its deadly march
President Obama has vowed to lead the international response to Ebola, but told defense chiefs from nearly two dozen countries on Tuesday that the “the world as a whole” was not doing enough. “Unless we contain this at the source,” said Obama, “this is going to continue to pose a threat to individual countries at a time when there’s no place that’s more than a couple of air flights away.”









