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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
September 16, 2014
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT ON THE EBOLA OUTBREAK
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Atlanta, Georgia
4:01 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Good afternoon, everybody. Please be seated. I want
to thank Dr. Frieden and everybody here at the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention for welcoming me here today. Tom and his team
just gave me an update on the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, our efforts
to help mobilize the international community to fight it, and the steps
that we’re taking to keep people here at home safe.
Tom and his team are doing outstanding work. Between the specialists
they have on the ground in West Africa and here at headquarters,
they’ve got hundreds of professionals who are working tirelessly on this
issue. This is the largest international response in the history of
the CDC. After this, I’ll be meeting with some of these men and women,
including some who recently returned from the front lines of the
outbreak. And they represent public service at its very best. And so I
just want them to know how much the American people appreciate them.
Many of them are serving far away from home, away from their families.
They are doing heroic work and serving in some unbelievably challenging
conditions — working through exhaustion, day and night, and many have
volunteered to go back. So we are very, very proud of them.
Their work and our efforts across the government is an example of
what happens when America leads in confronting some major global
challenges. Faced with this outbreak, the world is looking to us, the
United States, and it’s a responsibility that we embrace. We’re
prepared to take leadership on this to provide the kinds of capabilities
that only America has, and to mobilize the world in ways that only
America can do. That’s what we’re doing as we speak.
First and foremost, I want the American people to know that our
experts, here at the CDC and across our government, agree that the
chances of an Ebola outbreak here in the United States are extremely
low. We’ve been taking the necessary precautions, including working
with countries in West Africa to increase screening at airports so that
someone with the virus doesn’t get on a plane for the United States. In
the unlikely event that someone with Ebola does reach our shores, we’ve
taken new measures so that we’re prepared here at home. We’re working
to help flight crews identify people who are sick, and more labs across
our country now have the capacity to quickly test for the virus. We’re
working with hospitals to make sure that they are prepared, and to
ensure that our doctors, our nurses and our medical staff are trained,
are ready, and are able to deal with a possible case safely.
And here I’ve got to commend everybody at Emory University Hospital.
I just had the opportunity to meet with Doctors Gartland and Ribner and
members of their team and the nurses who — sorry, doctors, but having
been in hospitals, I know — (laughter) — they’re the ones really doing
the work. And I had a chance to thank them for their extraordinary
efforts in helping to provide care for the first Americans who recently
contracted the disease in Africa. The first two of those patients were
released last month and continue to improve. And it’s a reminder for
the American people that, should any cases appear in the United States,
we have world-class facilities and professionals ready to respond. And
we have effective surveillance mechanisms in place.
I should mention, by the way, that I had a chance to see Dr. Brantly
in the Oval Office this morning. And although he is still having to
gain back some weight, he looks great. He looks strong and we are
incredibly grateful to him and his family for the service that he has
rendered to people who are a lot less lucky than all of us.
As we all know, however, West Africa is facing a very different
situation, especially in the hardest hit countries: Liberia, Sierra
Leone, and in Guinea. Tom and others recently returned from the region,
and the scenes that they describe are just horrific. More than 2,400
men, women and children are known to have died — and we strongly suspect
that the actual death toll is higher than that. Hospitals, clinics and
the few treatment centers that do exist have been completely
overwhelmed. An already very weak public health system is near collapse
in these countries. Patients are being turned away, and people are
literally dying in the streets.
Now, here’s the hard truth: In West Africa, Ebola is now an epidemic
of the likes that we have not seen before. It’s spiraling out of
control. It is getting worse. It’s spreading faster and exponentially.
Today, thousands of people in West Africa are infected. That number
could rapidly grow to tens of thousands. And if the outbreak is not
stopped now, we could be looking at hundreds of thousands of people
infected, with profound political and economic and security implications
for all of us. So this is an epidemic that is not just a threat to
regional security — it’s a potential threat to global security if these
countries break down, if their economies break down, if people panic.
That has profound effects on all of us, even if we are not directly
contracting the disease.
And that’s why, two months ago, I directed my team to make this a
national security priority. We’re working this across our entire
government, which is why today I’m joined by leaders throughout my
administration, including from my national security team.
And we’ve devoted significant resources in support of our strategy
with four goals in mind. Number one, to control the outbreak. Number
two, to address the ripple effects of local economies and communities to
prevent a truly massive humanitarian disaster. Number three, to
coordinate a broader global response. And number four, to urgently
build up a public health system in these countries for the future — not
just in West Africa but in countries that don’t have a lot of resources
generally.
Now, this is a daunting task. But here’s what gives us hope. The
world knows how to fight this disease. It’s not a mystery. We know the
science. We know how to prevent it from spreading. We know how to
care for those who contract it. We know that if we take the proper
steps, we can save lives. But we have to act fast. We can’t dawdle on
this one. We have to move with force and make sure that we are catching
this as best we can, given that it has already broken out in ways that
we had not seen before.
So today, I’m announcing a major increase in our response. At the
request of the Liberian government, we’re going to establish a military
command center in Liberia to support civilian efforts across the region —
similar to our response after the Haiti earthquake. It’s going to be
commanded by Major General Darryl Williams, commander of our Army forces
in Africa. He just arrived today and is now on the ground in Liberia.
And our forces are going to bring their expertise in command and
control, in logistics, in engineering. And our Department of Defense is
better at that, our Armed Services are better at that than any
organization on Earth.
We’re going to create an air bridge to get health workers and medical
supplies into West Africa faster. We’re going to establish a staging
area in Senegal to help distribute personnel and aid on the ground more
quickly. We are going to create a new training site to train thousands
of health workers so they can effectively and safely care for more
patients. Personnel from the U.S. Public Health Service will deploy to
the new field hospitals that we’re setting up in Liberia. And USAID
will join with international partners and local communities in a
Community Care Campaign to distribute supplies and information kits to
hundreds of thousands of families so they can better protect themselves.
We’re also going to build additional treatment units, including new
isolation spaces and more than 1,000 beds. And in all our efforts, the
safety of our personnel will remain a top priority. Meanwhile, our
scientists continue their urgent research in the hope of finding new
treatments and perhaps vaccines. And today I’m calling on Congress to
approve the funding that we’ve requested so that we can carry on with
all these critical efforts.
Today, the United States is doing even more. But this is a global
threat, and it demands a truly global response. International
organizations just have to move faster than they have up until this
point. More nations need to contribute experienced personnel, supplies,
and funding that’s needed, and they need to deliver on what they pledge
quickly. Charities and individual philanthropists have given
generously, and they can make a big difference. And so we’re not
restricting these efforts to governmental organizations; we also need
NGOs and private philanthropies to work with us in a coordinated fashion
in order to maximize the impact of our response.
This week, the United States will chair an emergency meeting of the
U.N. Security Council. Next week, I’ll join U.N. Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon to continue mobilizing the international community around this
effort. And then, at the White House, we’re going to bring more nations
together to strengthen our global health security so that we can better
prevent, detect and respond to future outbreaks before they become
epidemics.
This is actually something that we had announced several months ago
at the G7 meeting. We determined that this has to be a top priority;
this was before the Ebola outbreak. We anticipated the fact that in
many of these countries with a weak public health system, if we don’t
have more effective surveillance, more effective facilities on the
ground, and are not helping poor countries in developing their ability
to catch these things quickly, that there was at least the potential of
seeing these kinds of outbreaks. And sadly, we now see that our
predictions were correct. It gives more urgency to this effort — a
global health initiative — that we have been pushing internationally.
Let me just close by saying this: The scenes that we’re witnessing
in West Africa today are absolutely gut-wrenching. In one account over
the weekend, we read about a family in Liberia. The disease had already
killed the father. The mother was cradling a sick and listless
five-year-old son. Her other son, 10-years-old, was dying, too. They
finally reached a treatment center but they couldn’t get in. And, said a
relative, “We are just sitting.”
These men and women and children are just sitting, waiting to die, right now. And it doesn’t have to be this way.
The reality is that this epidemic is going to get worse before it
gets better. But right now, the world still has an opportunity to save
countless lives. Right now, the world has the responsibility to act —
to step up, and to do more. The United States of America intends to do
more. We are going to keep leading in this effort. We’re going to do
our part, and we’re going to continue to make sure that the world
understands the need for them to step alongside us as well in order for
us to not just save the lives of families like the one I just discussed,
but ultimately, to make sure that this doesn’t have the kinds of
spillover effects that become even more difficult to control.
So thank you very much to the entire team that’s already doing this
work. And please know that you’ve got your President and
Commander-in-Chief behind you. Thank you.
END
4:14 P.M. EDT
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