A soldier goes through the decontamination process with U.S. Army soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), who are earmarked for the fight against Ebola, take part in training before their deployment to West Africa, at Fort Campbell
New York Times: Empty Ebola Clinics in Liberia Are Seen as Misstep in U.S. Relief Effort
MONROVIA, Liberia — As bodies littered the streets and the sick lay dying in front of overwhelmed clinics last year, President Obama ordered the largest American intervention ever in a global health crisis, hoping to stem the deadliest Ebola epidemic in history.
But after spending hundreds of millions of dollars and deploying nearly 3,000 troops to build Ebola treatment centers, the United States ended up creating facilities that have largely sat empty: Only 28 Ebola patients have been treated at the 11 treatment units built by the United States military, American officials now say.
Nine centers have never had a single Ebola patient.
Update: Report: 11 US Ebola Treatment Centers Treated Only 28 Patients -- Military.com/Stars and Stripes
WNU Editor: $1.4 billion to treat only 28 patients .... time to re-evaluate.
1 comment:
Well it is the truth.
There is a lot of bad news. Much of it to be expected.
But this is the one story where the Lede immediately depressed me.
People and organizations (the U.S.) can earn ill will by over promising.
Was it worth the risk or the $$ to only treat 28 people?
Sure some training got done, but there is always training of some sort. There is also a lot of disruption of families in peace time. From an career standpoint, a good write and administrator can always write up good assessment of how they supported the mission even if the higher ups did not give them much of a mission.
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