At the time Ebola hit West Africa, the health system and regulations were insufficient. Gostin and Friedman blame the “unfamiliarity of the Ebola virus for its delayed detection” (1902). In the first stages of Ebola, government leaders who acted in early response to the virus failed to educate citizens. Residents became frightened when doctors in hazmat suits arrived to relocate the ill to health facilities, as a result, residents started hiding the ill creating an “… underground transmission chain” (1902). As Ebola intensified, many paid doctors and health workers fled their jobs leaving health centers and health facilities in need of volunteers and funding. Frustration continued to grow when government funding started being neglected and professionals pay became scarce; doctors started reporting months without “hazard pay” or proper equipment (Salaam-Blyther 535). The 2014 Ebola crisis started breaking records, being recognized as the most infectious spread of Ebola in world history (Salaam-Blyther 523). Authors Gostin and Friedman’s article points out flaws in the Global Health System; the authors use important organizations as government funded programs failures during the West Africa Ebola crisis to drive their …show more content…
“In June, the virus had been confirmed in at least sixty different locations and within the next month, Ebola made its way to the United States” Gostin and Friedman pointed out. “By August 20, 2014, The World Health Organizations released a statement confirming 2,615 Ebola cases” (Salaam-Blyther 523). Many Health workers found themselves with little protective equipment, funding, and proper Ebola education. The numbers of health workers who became infected skyrocketed forcing health facilities to close and Ebola patients to fend for themselves. “On August 2014, the World Health Organization declared Ebola a Public Health Emergency… ” (Gostin and Friedman 1902). Following WHO’s announcement, international donations from the World Bank and the U.S started assisting the World Health Organization to support a “seventy-one million dollar” action plan (Gostin and Friedman 1902). Anxiety rose over the Ebola virus when the “Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) [released] a worst-case scenario of 1.4 million infections by mid-January, 2015” (1903). Governments started to take action and by February 2015, international contributions neared one billion. The goal to reach zero new Ebola patients became the main focus of the global health system. In the article, Gostin and Friedman are informing readers how the Ebola Epidemic revealed the weak points within the global health system. The authors explain