Image Courtesy: European Commission DG ECHO |
Having had the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as well as the FDA as clients in past years as a
communications consultant, I feel compelled to comment on the former’s recent
decision to treat the two American medical professionals with a "top secret" drug cocktail which appears to
have saved their lives from the Ebola virus.
According to this LA Times reporter Monte Morin, the selective treatment of two Americans has raised “red flags” for medical experts, but not for the reasons you might think. His August 6th article claims that “these medical experts” (unanimously?) decided that because the drug has not been tested by the FDA through formal clinical trials, it may prove “more harm than good.”
“There's a fairly good chance that
it could do more harm than good. The drug could kill you faster, or make you
die more miserably,” says Arthur Caplan, a medical ethicist, on the experimental
Ebola drug ZMapp.
Really?
More harm than good? I don’t think
that’s what the families of Dr. Kent Brantly
and Nancy Writebol, the two missionary workers who were treated, would be
saying right about now. By most accounts, Brantly was in grave condition,
telling his caregivers “I’m going to die,” through labored breath. Within an hour of receiving the drug he had
improved markedly, and was able to walk onto the airplane that took him to the
US the next day.
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Luckily those naysaying experts are not the only experts on the case, as another LA Times reporter, Robin Dixon, points out her article, “WHO to discuss access to experimental Ebola drug amid criticism.” In fact, there are plenty of WHO medical ethicists and other experts who believe this is more of an ethical crisis than a practical one, including the Peter Piot, who co-discovered the Ebola virus in 1976 and is director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
They argue that even though
limited quantities of the drug are available, and they are very expensive to
produce, that African governments should be allowed to make informed decisions
about whether or not to use the drugs, particularly the healthcare workers who
are at high risk for infection.
There
may not be enough of the drug to treat the hundreds of Africans infected, but surely
there is enough to treat the African nurses and doctors who have been on the
frontlines since the beginning, and who are now slowly dying along with their
patients. It is
especially troubling to note that Patrick
Sawyer, the African
American doctor treating Ebola patients in Liberia who was infected in early-July
and withered away for two weeks before passing, may have died because he was of the “wrong” skin color, as it was only later “discovered” that he was a US
citizen.
If we
don’t protect these health workers, regardless of their nationality, skin
color, or social status, who will be there to treat the desperate, helpless
people who have contracted the disease?
4 comments:
"It is especially troubling to note that Patrick Sawyer, the African American doctor treating Ebola patients in Liberia who was infected in early-July and withered away for two weeks before passing, may have died because he was of the 'wrong' skin color, as it was only later 'discovered' that he was a US citizen.
"If we don’t protect these health workers, regardless of their nationality, skin color, or social status, who will be there to treat the desperate, helpless people who have contracted the disease?"
Damn. Two white, American healthcare workers get a special vaccine and are later flown to the U.S. for treatment. And an African-American healthcare worker is allowed to DIE?!!!
Ain't that some SH*T!
What I may not have made clear in the post is my opinion that given the lack of dosage for numerous individuals, if there is to be "selective" treatment with this drug as was done with the two US medical professionals, then this should carry on to non-US health professionals who contract the virus in the course of their professional work. To me, this seems the most fair and just way of handling a very dire situation for which there is no immediate right answer. I don't mean to imply that any one life is more valuable than another, but that if one weighs the benefits of saving the lifesavers first, it will likely mean less people will perish in the end.
This is an interesting BBC article on the fatality rate of Ebola. Apparently it can be as low as 11% with good medical treatment:
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This figure of 54%, however, is an average taken from several countries. The fatality rate varies from one country to another - in Guinea it's about 73%, whereas in Liberia its 55%, in Sierra Leone it's 41% and in Nigeria it's 11%.
Why the variation?
The main factors, according to Majumder, are the level of preparedness and the availability and quality of medical care.
I agree fully that these drugs should be made available to the healthcare workers. I have been in liberia and i know that there are already very limited numbers of health care workers..
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