By Dr. Glenn Mollette
Ebola affected Liberians and other West Africans who
can obtain plane tickets will be headed to the United
States. How many more can we handle coming into our
country? We only have a handful of hospitals that are
currently equipped to handle Ebola. Each of these
has only four or five equipped isolated treatment areas.
I have friends in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Ghana and Nigeria.
We must help them by providing West African hospitals
with what they need to fight this fatal disease.
America spends billions on war every year. Spending
a few billion on equipping West African hospitals and
training staff will be a great investment in saving our
planet. I hope the West African nations will help us
financially since our nation is broke.
Closing commercial flights from this part of the world
is a prickly idea for many. We have Americans who are
living or visiting in Liberia who need to get back to America.
We can screen them and fly them home.
Medical teams, equipment and tons of medicine must go to
these areas. There are plenty of planes that can be booked for
the months and probably years of medical service that will be
demanded.
This will not be a permanent situation. However, we cannot
allow everybody to board planes to the United States and
circulate in our country while spreading Ebola.
Securing our borders from illegals, drug traders, ISIS
and Ebola is a task that seems almost insurmountable.
We are not winning the war on border security. We don't
want to lose the Ebola war. There must not be any
surrendering in this area of national security. A few
hundred Ebola cases in this country would be more than we
could handle.
The real answer to the Ebola crisis is finding a cure.
More than ever we need billions of dollars invested
in medical research. Millions of Americans simply endure
and live with disease instead of beating disease. We are
desperate for a new era in America's medical research.
It's time for a cure for cancer, neurological disease and
Ebola.
Dr. Glenn Mollette is an American columnist and author. He is read in all 50 states. The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily representative of any other group, organization or this publication.