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One better believe there are going to be more pandemics. We were caught unprepared for this one, so we better start preparing for the next one. The White House has put forth a plan, now we wait for congressional glory-hounds to start nit-picking and obstructing. -
The Biden administration laid out Friday a $65 billion plan U.S. officials say will help the nation combat the next biological threats after the Covid-19 pandemic subsides.
The next pandemic will likely be “substantially different” than Covid, and so the U.S. government must prepare now to deal with any future viral threat, Eric Lander, President Joe Biden’s science advisor and director of the Office of Science and Technology, said on a background call with reporters Friday.
The plan – released in a 27-page document titled “American Pandemic Preparedness: Transforming Our Capabilities” – calls for investing billions of dollars over the next decade to improve vaccines and therapeutics as well public health infrastructure, enhance the nation’s real-time monitoring capabilities and make upgrades to personal protective equipment that could be used against a wide range of pathogens.
The Biden administration’s plan has been organized into five “pillars,” officials said, each addressing different parts of the public health system. It proposes $15 billion to $20 billion to jump-start the administration’s efforts. The funds would be go to a new “mission control” office at the Department of Health and Human Services that’s closely overseen by Congress, officials said.
Lander said the ongoing Covid pandemic has exposed “fundamental issues” with America’s public health system, including inadequate funding and lack of coordination across federal, state and local governments.
The nation is still grappling with the worst Covid outbreak in the world, with more than 39 million cases and at least 643,776 deaths as of Friday, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Many recovered patients are still living with the long-term effects of the disease, he said.
“We need better capabilities ... because there’s a reasonable likelihood that another serious pandemic, that could be worse than Covid-19, will occur soon, possibly even within the next decade,” he told reporters on the call.
Officials said the administration’s call to invest $65 billion is “modest” when taking into account that the current pandemic has cost the U.S. an estimated $16 trillion in lost economic output.
It’s also smaller than what the nation spends on other programs, such as missile defense and anti-terrorism, which cost U.S. taxpayers $20 billion and $170 billion a year, respectively, they said. (Read more)
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