By Cheryl Pellerin
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Sept. 16, 2014 – U.S. Africa Command will set up
a Joint Force Command Headquarters in Liberia to support U.S. military
activities and help coordinate expanded U.S. and international relief efforts
to fight the West Africa Ebola outbreak, senior administration officials said
on a call previewing President Barack Obama’s visit today to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
At CDC, the officials said, the president will speak with
and hear from the team of experts who have been working hard on the U.S.
government's response to the Ebola outbreak and epidemic in West Africa to
date.
“The president has said that the United States considers the
Ebola outbreak and epidemic in West Africa to be a national security priority
and he has directed a response commensurate with that priority,” the officials
added.
DoD support of interagency partners
In Africa, in terms of the Defense Department’s role, by the
end of the week a general officer will be in place in Monrovia, Liberia,
leading the regional effort known as Operation United Assistance, the officials
said, describing the second of three new lines of effort DoD is adding to
ongoing efforts.
“The department is part of the whole-of-government approach
to help affected countries deal with one of the world's worst public health crises
and the most devastating Ebola outbreak in history,” one official said.
“The Department of Defense is committed to supporting our
interagency partners, specifically [the U.S. Agency for International
Development, or USAID] and the Centers for Disease Control, as we collectively
-- working together every day -- respond to the outbreak in West Africa,” the
official added.
As a third line of effort, U.S. Africa Command will
establish a regional intermediate staging base to facilitate DoD support for
operations of USAID and other counterparts. Africom will also provide engineers
to build more Ebola treatment units and establish a training site to train up
to 500 health care providers a week to directly care for Ebola patients, the
senior administration official said.
Ebola outbreak
According to the World Health Organization, the total number
of probable, confirmed and suspected cases in the current outbreak of Ebola
virus disease in West Africa, was 4,366, with 2,218 deaths, as of Sept. 7.
Countries affected are Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, Senegal and Sierra Leone.
Of these countries, Liberia has the greatest number of total
probable, confirmed and suspected cases, at 2,081, with 1,137 deaths, or 55
percent of total cases.
December 30, 2013, was epidemiological week 1 for the
outbreak. Sept. 7 was epidemiological week 36.
One official said the president will detail a significant
expansion of the Ebola fight that “represents a set of areas where the U.S.
military will bring a unique capability we believe will improve the
effectiveness of the entire global response.”
Expanding Ebola treatment capability
The official described such capabilities as those that would
help expand access in Ebola treatment units throughout the region, improve
first responders' capacity to identify and diagnose cases and trace contacts,
and improve the ability to conduct well-supplied community care campaigns that
reach every primary health care center throughout Liberia and eventually the
region to reduce the risk of transmission.
“We believe these efforts taken in total along with
significant efforts made to expand the international investment … as part of
the comprehensive response will turn the tide from the high-transmission
epidemic that continues to grow every single day to one where … we start to see
over many months a significant reduction in cases and deaths,” a senior
administration official said.
At DoD, to date the department has deployed operational
planners and contributed more than 10,000 sets of personal protective equipment
and more than 10,000 diagnostic assay kits, which are blood-test kits for the
Ebola virus.
DoD brings skill sets
The department also has one mobile laboratory on the ground
and has two more on the way to West Africa, and it’s preparing to deploy a
25-bed hospital that will be used to treat health care providers, the
highest-risk group of people in the region.
“DoD is going to remain focused on all these efforts but
we're also going to … focus on contributing command and control, logistics
support, training and engineering support,” one of the senior administration
officials said.
“We're bringing those skill sets that are unique to DoD in
direct support of our interagency partners,” the official added, “to address
the ongoing Ebola crisis in western Africa.”
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