Britain's leading public health doctor today blames the
failure to find a vaccine against the Ebola virus on the "moral
bankruptcy" of the pharmaceutical industry to invest in a disease because
it has so far only affected people in Africa – despite hundreds of deaths.
Professor John Ashton, the president of the UK Faculty of
Public Health, says the West needs to treat the deadly virus as if it were
taking hold in the wealthiest parts of London rather than just Sierra Leone,
Guinea and Liberia.
He writes: "In both cases [Aids and Ebola], it seems
that the involvement of powerless minority groups has contributed to a
tardiness of response and a failure to mobilise an adequately resourced
international medical response.
"In the case of Aids, it took years for proper research
funding to be put in place and it was only when so-called 'innocent' groups
were involved (women and children, haemophiliac patients and straight men) that
the media, politicians, scientific community and funding bodies stood up and
took notice."
The Ebola outbreak has so far claimed the lives of at least
729 people across Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone and Nigeria, according to the
latest figures from the World Health Organisation (WHO), although the number is
likely to be far higher.
Yesterday, a US relief organisation confirmed that two US
aid workers who contracted the disease in Liberia had left the country. Dr Kent
Brantly was being treated in a specialised hospital unit in Atlanta, Georgia,
after becoming the first person with the disease to arrive on US soil yesterday
evening. The second aid worker, Nancy Writebol, was due to land on a separate
private flight.
In pictures: Ebola virus
On Friday, the WHO warned that the outbreak in West Africa
was "moving faster than our efforts to control it". The
organisation's director general, Dr Margaret Chan, warned that if the situation
continued to deteriorate, the consequences would be "catastrophic" to
human life. Professor Ashton believes that more money must be funnelled into
research for treatment.
"We must respond to this emergency as if it was in
Kensington, Chelsea and Westminster. We must also tackle the scandal of the
unwillingness of the pharmaceutical industry to invest in research [on]
treatments and vaccines, something they refuse to do because the numbers
involved are, in their terms, so small and don't justify the investment. This
is the moral bankruptcy of capitalism acting in the absence of a moral and
social framework."
Western countries are on high alert after Patrick Sawyer, a
civil servant for the Liberian government, died last week after arriving at
Lagos airport – the first known case in Nigeria. International airline hubs are
the focus of attention because of the high volume of passengers flying into and
out of West Africa every day. Dubai's Emirates airline began a ban yesterday on
its flights in Guinea over the crisis, with the suspension lasting until
further notice.
Professor Ashton welcomed the decision by the Foreign
Secretary, Philip Hammond, to convene a meeting of the Government's crisis
committee, Cobra, last week to discuss the UK's preparedness for cases of Ebola
in this country.
Development of a vaccine is in the early stages in the US,
but this is on a small scale and there is little hope of one being ready to
treat the current outbreak in West Africa. Dr Anthony Fauci, the director of
the National Institutes of Health, an agency of the US Department of Health and
Human Services, has said it has plans possibly to begin testing an experimental
Ebola vaccine on people in mid-September, following encouraging results in
pre-clinical trials on monkeys. Earlier this month, the US Food and Drug
Administration put a hold on a trial upon healthy volunteers by Tekmira
Pharmaceuticals Corporation to ensure their potential Ebola treatment has no
ill-effects, as it sought more information to ensure the safety of volunteers.
Professor Ashton said: "The real spotlight needs to be
on the poverty and environmental squalor in which epidemics thrive and the
failure of political leadership and public health systems to respond
effectively. The international community has to be shamed into real
commitment... if the root causes of diseases like Ebola are to be
addressed."
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