A column I wrote earlier this year expressed concern that President Trump, through a January 2025 executive order, withdrew the United States from the World Health Organization. I argued that this was a poorly considered, irresponsible and dangerous decision.
It isolates the United States and hinders communication with the international health community. It impedes coordinated global planning and response to pandemics and infectious disease outbreaks and diminishes the operational capacity of the WHO through reductions in funding and experienced personnel. The WHO is struggling.
Now, with the reemergence of a high-consequence infectious disease on the world stage — Ebola — we are reminded of the potential adverse consequences of these actions.
The Ebola outbreak in Central Africa is a wake-up call to the ramifications of the U.S. retreat from global health leadership. The WHO has declared the outbreak a “Public Health Emergency of International Concern.” Recall that during the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak, some cases reached the United States.
Ebola has a high fatality rate, and for this particular strain there is no vaccine or specific treatment. It’s highly infectious, spreading through contact with bodily fluids.
Fortunately, Ebola still has relatively low pandemic potential because it does not spread through respiratory transmission, as influenza and COVID-19 do. Eventually, the world will face another virulent, highly infectious respiratory virus that will present a far more perilous situation.
Withdrawal from the WHO reduced health infrastructure support for affected countries, and decreased or eliminated support for other international health agencies hinder the global response to the Ebola outbreak. These actions create funding and operational shortfalls for frontline organizations. Two agencies deserve special mention.
The closure of the U.S. Agency for International Development, a critical leader in global health crises, was particularly devastating because of the loss of infrastructure and essential functions it provided, including funding, technical expertise, and on-the-ground staff.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the nation’s lead agency for international health efforts, previously worked closely with the WHO. The CDC has also sustained severe cuts, with approximately 25 percent of its workforce eliminated, including infectious disease and outbreak response experts who were fired, resigned or chose to retire.
America’s pullback from international health engagement will likely have serious consequences for global health security. It significantly weakens coordinated disease surveillance, contact tracing, staffing of isolation facilities, establishment of safe and adequate clinical care, deployment of existing vaccines and more.
It’s true that the United States has done more than its fair share to support global health efforts. However, we are one of the world’s richest nations and its most powerful. America has a long history of serving humanity. Moreover, investing in international health makes our own country safer; a health threat anywhere can become a health threat everywhere.
In the past, America helped ensure that many outbreaks never became global crises. Today, we are no longer the world’s leader in global health security, and we have lost international respect and credibility. The administration appears more focused on keeping Ebola from our shores through travel restrictions and mandatory quarantines for exposed U.S. residents in Kenya than on outbreak control at its source.
There will be another pandemic. The rest of the world is stepping up coordination with the WHO, while America shoots itself in the foot.
Dr. Richard Feldman is an Indianapolis family physician and the former Indiana state health commissioner. Email him atricharddfeldman@gmail.com.
This article originally appeared on The Herald-Times: Withdrawal from world health efforts will hurt U.S. | Opinion
Reporting by Dr. Richard Feldman, Columnist / The Herald-Times
USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect
By Dr. Richard Feldman, Columnist | USA TODAY Network
