I'm frankly confused as to why so many blame the CDC for this situation in Dallas.
Due to how both our healthcare system and how our very government (federal/state/local) is set up, the responsibility for implementing protocols lies with the state and local health departments and the facilities themselves. The CDC is not a police force. It cannot enforce rules even if it had the manpower to do so. The CDC regularly issues advisories, etc regarding ALL kinds of communicable diseases. Whether there is follow through or not is the responsibility of the states/localities and facilities, unfortunately.
Those who wish to blame the CDC and say it should do more should follow through on that by pressuring your elected officials to earmark more funds for the CDC and to legislate to expand it's function. Or vote for candidates who support such expansion and more robust funding.
I have a sneaking suspicion though that the segment of the public who want to blame CDC are the same segment of the public that objects to most all federal oversight of absolutely anything ("too much regulation!") and are the same who are in favor of budget cuts to things like public health.
Some need to ask themselves what on earth the state and local health departments down in Texas were doing over the summer when CDC was already warning about future Ebola cases, and already had information regarding protocols out. I know they did because I saw them at the practice I worked at last summer. After all, if the "ideal" way to deal with problems is at the state and local level rather than the federal, then why weren't they carrying out their responsibility down there? And why wasn't this facility training it's staff in preparation? one would think the free market would dictate that it's in the facility's interest to protect it's workers (an thus it's profit), no?
Can't have it both ways.
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