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Obama Administration: No Bio-Defense Infrastructure fo the Flu Pandemic

June 23, 2009 (LPAC)--This item updates a June 12 EIR article (posted here, June 16), written on the occasion of the June 11 WHO declaration of a Level Six world A/H1N1 pandemic. The full article follows this update.


by Marcia Merry Baker

June 22 (EIRNS)—What is outstanding about the Obama Administration's policy towards the new A/H1N1 flu, before and since the World Health Organization's announcement June 11 of the highest level of world pandemic alert, Stage Six, is its deliberate do-nothing response. There is no mobilization of reserve hospital capacity, vaccination production, ranks of public health staff, and other measures called for. The Obama Administration's stance is thus in service of the stated depopulation drive by the likes of HMV Prince Philip Mountbatten, Her Majesty's Virus, who said in 1988, "In the event that I am reincarnated, I would like to return as a deadly virus, in order to contribute something to solve overpopulation..." (Deutsche Press Agentur, August 1988).

The Obama cabinet member in charge of the U.S. response, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, is deploying as a prominent spokesman for the Obama Nazi-medicine health "reform," while advocating worse than nothing on dealing with the pandemic. This is in line with the British attempts to delay or prevent the WHO pandemic Level Six alert altogether (see article below).

On June 11, the day of the WHO declaration, Sebelius and Secretary of Homeland Security Janey Napolitano issued a three-paragraph statement that, "Today's decision by the WHO was expected and doesn't change what we have been doing here in the United States to prepare for and respond to the public health challenge." Sebelius showed what she meant the next day by presiding over a health-care "reform" event in Omaha, Nebraska, in her business-as-usual service for cuts in health care. On Sunday morning news TV June 14, she was the spokesman on CNN, to peddle the line that there was "overutilization" of health-care infrastructure in the United States. Sebelius gives a weekly video update on the progress towards health care "reform" on the website, www.healthreform.gov, but only occasional comments on the pandemic.

Over the last month, the only two press releases on her HHS website on the A/H1N1 threat, apart from the June 11 statement, are two May 22 releases—one on a Sesame Street TV advertising campaign aimed for children to "cover their cough" and take other self-protections. And another that day, on the U.S. limited effort to work with vaccine producers. Sebelius has issued the policy that Federal orders will be given on priority lists of who will get the vaccine. All other matters—the lack of hospitals, licensed beds, staff, and so on, are either not mentioned or are sloughed over, by saying that Federal agencies will "cooperate with state and local" governments.

In reality, state and local governments are financially in ruins, with shortages worsening by the day. But in the United States, even mention of hospitals and ratios of infrastructure have been almost taboo, under the pall of the Obama Nazi-medicine "reform" campaign. Nationwide, there is now a ratio of barely 2.7 beds per thousand persons; this is falling, and is also below that in dozens of U.S. counties and cities.

But on May 28, Sebelius said, "I don't know anything about hospitals," in reply to a question from EIR about the dangerous trend of U.S. hospitals shutting down, when she was giving a media briefing advocating poverty clinics. Her remark is especially venal, given that as Governor in Kansas—her position before joining the Obama Administration, she was the subject of scandal for presiding over a takedown of hundreds of specialized psychiatric beds in Kansas hospitals. Also, many rural counties throughout the Plains States now have no community hospital at all.

For example, on June 10th, Robert C. Pivonka, Mayor of Larned, Kansas issued an Open Letter to the Community of Larned and Pawnee Counties, saying, "This morning, June 10, 2009 [he was told that state agencies would] close our hospital, St. Joseph Memorial Hospital. We were told the doors will close in 90 days and there is no appeal.... We were not expecting this...." He said that his goal is to reinstate a "free standing, independent, community hospital, with emergency room services, 10-15 acute care beds, lab and X-ray, a CT scanner, and professional staff...." But as of October 10, there will be no hospital at all. This is happening all across the nation.

The sabotage of infrastructure in the U.S. stands in dramatic contrast to the discussion that has broken out in France, Italy, and certain other nations, about what ought to be the scale of response to combat the pandemic. (Summarized below).

- U.S. Bio-Defense Infrastructure Crisis -

The following are a few of the indicative parameters of the takedown of bio-defense infrastructure in the U.S., now supported by the Obama Administration.

* Bio-science surveillance, research, and development. In February, the U.S. Association of Public Health Laboratories reported that 80% of the labs they surveyed have cut back their operations since January 2008, because of funding reductions. The critical cadre of state lab workers is being reduced, ranging from epidemiologists, to technicians and other staff. There is no Federally-backed, crash virology R&D drive.

* State and local preparedness programs for disasters such as an influenza epidemic, have experienced funding cuts of 25% since 2005, despite all the talk about "pandemic preparation" since the 2005 avian flu outbreak. (Source: April 27 warning by Robert Petronk, executive director of the National Association of City and County Health Officials.) Eleven states and the District of Columbia cut funding for public health services in FY 2008. In California, the Health Department is already implementing a 10% budget cut, with additional cuts now in the works. The Obama Administration's "American Recovery and Reinvestment Act" slashed $700 million from its original plan for public-health services.

* The U.S. lost over 12,000 health-care workers in 2008, and is losing this year at the same rate. This comes on top of an already shrunken base. In 2000, the total U.S. public-health workforce numbered 448,000, which was 50,000 fewer than in 1980. In 1980, there were 220 public-health workers per 100,000 U.S. residents; by 2000, this had fallen to 158 per 100,000. Now it is worse. A paper released in December 2008, by the Association of Schools of Public Health (www.asph.org), "Confronting the Public Health Workforce Crisis," points out that many of the remaining workers are at retirement age.

Dr. Paul Jarris, Executive Director of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials told Congress April 28, "We don't have a preparedness force ready and waiting." Instead, "the regular workforce" has to kick into action, when there is an emergency, but that force is being undermined. He said, "We don't even have what we had two years ago.... We're at a critical resource and workforce point." Again on May 20, Jarris appealed for help, as did health officials from Missouri, Ohio and New York, who said they don't have the staff to cope with a pandemic ahead. "The unknown is coming this Fall," said Ohio's Cuyahoga County Health Commissioner Terry Allan, referring to the second wave of influenza, who explained, "we know what to do, we just don't have the horses to do it over an extended period of time." Resources are too stretched.

* The rate of shutdown of hospitals and related facilities—the frontline defense of the population— is at the stage of a public health emergency. The number of community hospitals in the U.S. fell from a peak of 5,904 in 1980, down to barely 5,000 in 1999, and today, stands at 4,897. The ratio of licensed hospital beds per 1,000 population has dropped from 4.5 in the late 1970s, down to 2.7 today. The situation in New Jersey is typical: In February, the New Jersey Hospital Association released the results of a survey over the past two months, reporting that of the 37 of the state's 74 acute-care hospitals that responded to the survey, 27% had a drop in cash reserves, and were making drastic cuts in staff and services. Clinics associated with hospitals are being cut. Nationwide, hospital emergency departments have decreased by 15% from 1992 to 2003, while over the same time period, millions more people have been seeking emergency room medicine.

Hundreds of counties have widespread shortages of doctors, nurses and equipment. The hallmark features of modern health care—nuclear medicine units, screening services, and others—are in decline. For example, in 2008, the number of mammograms given in the U.S. was 16% lower than in 2000.


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