US 'underprepared' for 'greatest public health crisis' in century: CDC director

  The novel coronavirus, has contracted more than 5.3 million people, causing over 168,000 deaths in the United States

PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

NEW YORK:

The United States was "underprepared" for "the greatest public health crisis that hit this nation in a century," a senior US health official has said, as America has been the hardest-hit nation worldwide by Covid-19.

The "collateral damage" of the pandemic can be seen from the fact that public health officials have been forced to turn their focus away disproportionately from treating AIDS, Hepatitis C and other diseases, Robert Redfield, director of the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), said in an interview with WebMD chief medical officer John Whyte on Wednesday.

The novel coronavirus, which has contracted more than 5.3 million people and caused over 168,000 related deaths in the United States, has exposed many weaknesses of the US  health system.

 "We have some states that we're down to less than 40, 30, 20 contact tracers," Redfield said. "We really haven't invested, in this nation, in the core capabilities of public health."

"Now is the time to invest in public health. Data, data analytics, predictive data analysis, laboratory resilience in our public health labs, public health workforce," he said.

"We need to owe it to our children and grandchildren that this nation is never under-prepared again for a public health crisis," Redfield said.

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