The World Health
Organization's chief on Sunday admitted the UN agency had been caught napping
on Ebola and pledged reforms to avoid similar mistakes in future. Despite turning a corner
in the fight against Ebola, there was no room for complacency, WHO head
Margaret Chan told a rare emergency session of the agency, according to AFP.
Chan acknowledged
blistering criticism that WHO's response to the epidemic had been slow and
shoddy and called for a revamp of its crisis management techniques.
"This was west
Africa's first experience with the virus and it delivered some horrific shocks
and surprises," she said.
"The world,
including WHO, was too slow to see what was unfolding before us," she told
delegates at only the third emergency session in the history of the WHO.
"The data tell us we
have bent the curve and avoided the worst-case scenario," she said.
"Ebola is a tragedy
that has taught the world, including WHO, many lessons also about how to
prevent similar events in the future," she said.
"Never again should
the world be caught by surprise, unprepared."
Chan disclosed that
"the priority in 2015 is to help countries get the Ebola rate down to
zero."
- US$100-mln contingency fund -
A resolution adopted at
the end of the session called for the creation of a war chest to fight future
epidemics with Britain immediately pledging US$10 million (nine million euros).
Chan said the overall aim
was to create a contingency fund of US$100 million, which would be "a good
starting point".
Other measures agreed
upon included faster recruitment and deployment of frontline workers in future
emergencies, the development of "quality, safe, effective and affordable
vaccines and treatments", and streamlining and strengthening the WHO's
response with the naming of a WHO special representative to coordinate and
oversee the Ebola fight.
The worst outbreak of the
virus in history has seen nearly 9,000 deaths in a year -- almost all in the
three West African countries of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone -- and sparked
a major health scare worldwide.
"Countries must be
supported to have their own workforce for responding to emergencies, trained
and drilled to perform with military precision," Chan said.
- Criticism -
David Nabarro, the UN's
Ebola coordinator, said "responses must be strategic, strong and
speedy" in the future, acknowledging "weaknesses" in the global
action against the epidemic.
But he noted a string of
generous contributions in funds, expertise and help in building up the creaky
health infrastructure of the worst-hit countries, singling out Britain, China,
France, the United States as well as the African Union and the west African
regional bloc ECOWAS.
The WHO still came in for
criticism from delegates at the conference.
"Too many times the
technical is overruled by the political in WHO, we have to revise that,"
said Tom Frieden, the director of the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
"The WHO we have is
not the WHO we need," he said.
The conference also heard
from Sierra Leonean nurse Rebecca Johnson, who survived the disease after a
four-week treatment in December.
Johnson said she could
not walk or talk and nearly went blind. "But I have
recovered my sight," she said. Despite her recovery,
Johnson said she was "stigmatized and am still stigmatized by some people
in my community. I sometimes go to a
(lonely) place and cry," she said, but ended her speech with a message of
hope.
"Ebola is not the
end of the world. Ebola can be beaten."
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