Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Views On Ebola: Federal Mistakes Prompt State Quarantines; Media Amplifies Worries
So the Obama Administration is pressuring the Governors of New York and New Jersey behind the scenes to reverse their decision on Friday to impose a mandatory quarantine on health workers returning from treating Ebola patients in West Africa. Well, if it weren鈥檛 for the Administration鈥檚 incompetence in handling Ebola risks on U.S. soil, maybe the state leaders wouldn鈥檛 have felt they had to take matters into their own hands. (10/26)
Of course, the argument for quarantine may be less about medicine than it is about mass psychology. Ebola is a scary disease and quarantine's main, perfectly worthy goal may simply be to calm the public. But in public health, as in medicine, the first principle is Do No Harm. Medical experts and health officials worry, for example, that quarantine might discourage aid workers from traveling to West Africa, at a time when the region desperately needs more personnel to fight the epidemic. (Jonathan Cohn, 10/25)
Just start typing 鈥渃an I get ebola from鈥 into Google and it suggests all kinds of frenzied questions. 鈥淎 toilet seat?鈥 鈥渟neezing?鈥 (Soon: 鈥淎 czar?鈥 鈥淒reams?鈥 鈥淚mpure thoughts?鈥) We have enough panic to fill the 24-hour cable news channels 24 hours a day, seven days a week, with the occasional break for commercials (to panic about the loss of our sexual potency or panic about what will happen to Grandma if she falls in the house when she is alone). ... Now people are saying we need to calm down. That this panic is doing more harm than good. That, in the scheme of things, we (in America, anyway) are far less likely to contract Ebola than to be killed by lightning, bees or sharks. People say this as though it is reassuring. Frankly, it is the opposite. If you want me to calm down, do not tell me about other things that are more likely to kill me. (Alexandra Petri, 10/24)
I support government spending on basic research. But I really do not support the wrongheaded idea that medical research is like ordering groceries from Peapod: Just dial up what you want, and if you鈥檙e willing to pay the cost, you can have the goodies. In fact, it鈥檚 more like a lottery: if you don鈥檛 play, you can鈥檛 win, but at best, you still lose an awful lot. An Ebola vaccine is entering trials right now, and if it succeeds, that will be incredible news. But it could fail in many ways, and acting as if it鈥檚 a guarantee is grossly irresponsible. (Megan McArdle, 10/24)