Posted on 04/10/2002 11:36:55 AM PDT by Stand Watch Listen
The United States could make it "impossible" for biological agents to be used as effective weapons of terror if the country spends $10 billion to $30 billion a year to revamp its ailing public health system, one of the nations leading biological defense experts told Global Security Newswire yesterday.Tara OToole, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Civilian Biodefense Strategies, said infectious diseases will probably never be eradicated, but their use as weapons of mass destruction could be virtually eliminated if the United States invests sufficient resources into the public health sector in the next two or three decades.
"If we figure out enough counters to the threats [so] that it would be impossible to use a biological weapon as a weapon of mass lethality," OToole said during a wide-ranging interview.
"Twenty years from now, [if terrorists] have a disease that can kill everybody, Im going to be able to take that disease the first time it hits, diagnose it, take it apart, and figure out the cure and the vaccine within 24 hours," she said.
Such drastic and unprecedented improvements to both public health agencies and health care providers could only result if President Bush implements a national defense policy that places biological defense as a top priority, injecting large amounts of cash that would still only be a fraction of budgets given to the Defense Department and homeland security efforts, OToole said.
"We can do this. We are America. We are the best in bioresearch," OToole said. "We have enormous advantages in terms of talent and infrastructure."
The $2.2 billion the United States is providing for biological defense this year is deceptively low funding, mainly because $1 billion of those funds are earmarked for diluting and creating more smallpox vaccine, OToole said.
Once that $1 billion for vaccines is lopped off, only $700 million is going to the nations 5,000 hospitals--funds that need to be divided among the 50 states, she said.
"It sounds like a lot of money but its nothing compared to the need," OToole said.
"Weve got the Department of Defense Secretary [Donald Rumsfeld] saying that what he worries most about is bioterrorism. Then the next word is that were spending $700 million for bioterrorism preparedness? Lets get in the same ballpark," she said.
"The increase in the [Defense] budget this year that Bush is asking for is $48 billion," she added. "Not only that, weve got to come from a standing start. This is not a budget thats been nourished throughout the Cold War to some degree of minimal competency. This is public health. It has been starved for the past decades. It doesnt have the fundamental talent that the military has been able to attract."
Attracting "the best and brightest" minds into the field of biological defense is one of OTooles main goals.
A recent American Hospital Association report said it would cost $12 billion for all U.S. hospitals to achieve the "rudimentary capability" to handle a biological weapons attack.
Another study in Maryland after a high-rise fire found that all of the states hospitals combined could provide only 100 ventilators on a given day.
"Seven hundred million dollars is not a huge amount of money. It sounds like an enormous amount of money in terms of public health. [But] $10 million would go very quickly in Maryland," OToole said.
Because 36 states are currently mired in a recession and have hiring freezes, states such as Maryland are simply shuffling resources from one area to another, OToole said.
The United States, she said, needs to get "the laws changed so you can hire people through more svelte, less agonizing routes there have to be new conduits for bringing in the talents."
Which makes absolutely no difference in the short run.
Look like they're using 9/11 as an excuse to make another run at "Hillarycare".
This is nothing but pure pie-in-the-sky speculation, and it seems insanely optimistic. It's like the many predictions in the 50's through the 80's that declared confidently that we'd have complete cures for cancer by the year 2000.
Such drastic and unprecedented improvements to both public health agencies and health care providers could only result if President Bush implements a national defense policy that places biological defense as a top priority, injecting large amounts of cash that would still only be a fraction of budgets given to the Defense Department and homeland security efforts, OToole said.
Bingo, here's her real agenda. This is nothing more than the world's largest grant application. "Give us truckloads of money, and we'll see what we can do", O'Toole says. And she cleverly links it to the most current medical bogey-man, bioterrorism, to increase the chance of public support.
Look like they're using 9/11 as an excuse to make another run at "Hillarycare".Valid point!
It is basically a good thing to get the medical community thinking outside the box on this stuff.
WHAT A TOOL! What has she cured lately?
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