The World Health Organization delayed calling the Ebola epidemic in West Africa a public health emergency because it was worried it could affect local economies or interfere with a Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca, a special report by AP has revealed.
Health experts spoke two months previously of the seriousness of the crisis, but it took the World Health Organization (WHO) until August 7 to finally call the outbreak a public health emergency. By August 4, the death toll from the disease was already approaching 1,000, while the WHO stated on their website at the time: “This is currently the largest EVD outbreak ever recorded.”
Health experts slammed the decision by the WHO to delay issuing a ‘global SOS’ due to fears that it could anger the African countries involved by hampering the development of their economies.
Dr Sylvie Briand, head of the pandemic and epidemic diseases department at WHO, admitted to AP that the organization made wrong decisions, but said postponing the alert made sense at the time because it could have had catastrophic economic consequences.
"What I've seen in general is that for developing countries it's sort of a death warrant you're signing," she said.
Pierre Formenty, a top Ebola expert who was dispatched by the WHO to West Africa to deal with the crisis said Guinea was anxious not to make a big deal of the epidemic, as the country relied on the export of bauxite as its main source of foreign currency.
Therefore they were looking to, "minimize artificially the magnitude of the Ebola outbreak to reassure expatriates working in the mining industry," Formenty said.
#Ebola: where we stand today - via @WHOpic.twitter.com/qCM3UTpNcI
— ICRC (@ICRC) March 20, 2015
Declaring a public health emergency had first been mooted in June by experts within the WHO, but one unnamed director told AP, this was a “last resort.”
However, Michael Osterholm, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Minnesota said, "That's like saying you don't want to call the fire department because you're afraid the fire trucks will create a disturbance in the neighborhood."
Critics of the health body say their failure to act quicker may have cost lives. One former WHO employee, Matthieu Kamwa said: "People died because things were not done." He had previously worked as the agency’s representative to the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2008, when the central African nation experienced an Ebola outbreak.
#Ebola in West #Africa: The possible consequences of further intl spread are particularly serious - WHO Emergency Committee
— WHO (@WHO) August 8, 2014
As soon as the crisis was labeled a public health emergency, aid and expertise began pouring in from around the globe. Days later, Canada offered to donate its experimental Ebola virus vaccine after the WHO said it would be ethical to use untested vaccines to try and contain the outbreak.
Russia’s consumer watchdog Rospotrbnadzor dispatched a mobile laboratory to Guinea to help contain the disease in response to a direct request from Guinea’s government, while Cuba sent 400 health workers to West Africa to help combat the epidemic. A whole host of other nations, including the US, France and the UK also offered assistance.
READ MORE: Ebola response ‘far too slow’ and cost lives – UK watchdog
Dr Bruce Aylward, WHO's top Ebola official, defended his body’s decision to delay calling the outbreak a public health emergency.
"What you would expect is the whole world wakes up and goes, 'Oh my gosh, this is a terrible problem, we have to deploy additional people and send money,'" he said. "Instead what happened is people thought, 'Oh my goodness, there's something really dangerous happening there and we need to restrict travel and the movement of people.'"
The WHO also defended their stance, saying they were overwhelmed with a number of health crises around the globe at the time of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, according to AP. In June, scientist Stephane Hugonnet warned that the agency was "overwhelmed with outbreaks."
The health body was having to deal with a Polio outbreak in Syria, as well as a return of Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome, or MERS, which by early June, had afflicted nearly 700 people and killed 204, mostly in the Arabian Peninsula.