Key facts
- Most of the 13 U.S. treatment centers in a government-funded network are ready to handle Ebola patients.
Most U.S. treatment centers for severe infectious diseases are ready to handle Ebola patients. This comes as the U.S. proceeds with building a quarantine facility in Kenya, despite protests and calls to treat Americans domestically. The U.S. has invested significantly in preparedness since the 2014 outbreak.
Most of the 13 U.S. treatment centers within a government-funded hospital network designed for severe infectious diseases are prepared to handle patients, including those with Ebola, according to hospital representatives. This readiness comes as the U.S. continues construction of a 50-bed Ebola quarantine facility in Kenya, intended for Americans exposed to the virus, despite ongoing protests in Kenya that have resulted in at least two deaths and a Kenyan court order blocking construction. The U.S. State Department has stated that symptomatic Americans would be quarantined in Kenya, while asymptomatic ones would be brought back to the U.S. for treatment. The U.S. has invested hundreds of millions of dollars in its health system's preparedness for Ebola since the 2014 outbreak, with the current network receiving approximately $21 million annually. Nine of the 13 centers have confirmed their ability to receive patients exposed to Ebola, requiring them to maintain specific protocols, training, and equipment. Healthcare officials and former CDC officials have raised concerns that the Kenya facility could pose health risks and hinder recruitment for outbreak response, arguing for domestic treatment instead.
The U.S. is balancing its international response to the Ebola outbreak with domestic preparedness and facing public and political pressure regarding its strategy, highlighting complex decisions in global health security and crisis management.