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In a conversation with The Guardian, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organisation (WHO), called Congo’s Ebola outbreak, which is the second worst outbreak in the world, a ‘global wake-up call’ for the international community.
The risk of such diseases spreading from conflict areas is alarmingly high, and it is time the world stops neglecting these regions.
He said,
Thus, what lacked was a more “day-to-day funding for preparedness to combat serious epidemics before they become regional or international threats.”
Ahead of a new call for funding for the response to the Ebola outbreak, he said that it could be controlled in the Democratic Republic of Congo in the short-term, but it could also return, considering the political instability in the areas at the centre of the outbreak — North Kivu and Iruri.
Currently, the outbreak is marked as a ‘category three emergency’, the WHO’s highest level before a declaration as PHEIC.
The WHO chief believed that designating it as a PHEIC could further complicate the response of health teams on the ground.
Responding to the criticism the organisation has received for responding to the Congo outbreak, he said,
“We’re not investing in preparedness to detect outbreaks quickly. We are investing after the problem comes and knocks on our door when it’s too late. So how can we move on from that mindset? We have to be as strong as the weakest link and we need to invest in strengthening the systems of the weakest link”, he said.
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