Kamala Harris compared the coronavirus pandemic to the U.S. Ebola outbreak, labeling it a “pandemic” dealt with by the Obama administration.
During her first public appearance as presumptive Democratic vice presidential nominee on Wednesday, the senator from California compared the novel coronavirus, which has infected over 5.1 million and is linked to 165,000 deaths in the United States, to the Ebola outbreak in 2014. According to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, only “eleven people were treated for Ebola in the United States during the 2014-2016 epidemic.”
“It didn’t have to be this way. Six years ago, in fact, we had a different health crisis. It was called Ebola. And we all remember that pandemic. But you know what happened then? Barack Obama and Joe Biden did their job. Only two people in the United States died. Two. That is what is called leadership,” Harris said.
Harris: Coronavirus pandemic “didn’t have to be this way.”
On Ebola: “You know what happened then? Barack Obama and Joe Biden did their job…Compare that to the moment we find ourselves in now.”https://t.co/XoNUVQwX2g pic.twitter.com/1GpbxQBUUj
— WFLA NEWS (@WFLA) August 12, 2020
“Epidemic” and “pandemic” are two distinct medical terms. The CDC says, “an outbreak is called an epidemic when there is a sudden increase in cases,” whereas a pandemic is a situation where a “disease spreads across several countries and affects a large number of people.” The coronavirus was labeled an epidemic after a spike of cases were reported from a localized region in China, but was upgraded to a pandemic after spreading across the globe.
The Ebola virus never met the definition of a “pandemic” because it was primarily restricted to African areas, such as Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. The Obama administration, who also referred to the outbreak as an epidemic, conducted entry screenings at major airports on passengers coming from the countries impacted by the disease.
“You must remember that the risk of Ebola for the everyday citizen in the United States is extraordinarily low,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the infectious disease chief at the National Institutes of Health, said at the time. “So Ebola is on the radar screen, but for us is an extraordinarily remote threat.”
Some medical professionals criticized Harris’s comparison on social media.
There is absolutely no comparision between Ebola and the novel coronavirus/COVID.
2009, H1N1: Obama/Biden abandoned any effort against it months before it faded. They hoped for the best and, per their own “czar” Ron Klain, got lucky.
The Ebola-COVID line is pure bullshit.
— Nan Hayworth, M.D. (@NanHayworth) August 12, 2020
Comparing COVID19 to Ebola is irresponsible and highlights how little people understand public health and disease transmission.
— Nicole Saphier, MD (@NBSaphierMD) August 12, 2020
The World Health Organization also categorizes the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak as an epidemic in Africa. The Ebola virus is significantly less transmissible and more lethal than the coronavirus, which is still being studied by public health officials and experts. The CDC says Ebola is “not transmitted through the air and does not spread through casual contact,” but is contracted by body fluid transmission or “handling or eating certain infected mammals such as monkeys, fruit bats, forest antelope and porcupines.”
“People infected with Ebola aren’t contagious unless they have symptoms. If a person sick with Ebola coughs or sneezes, and saliva or mucus touches another person’s eyes, nose, mouth, or an open cut or wound, these fluids may spread Ebola,” reads a description from the CDC.
COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, is “thought to spread mainly from person to person, mainly through respiratory droplets produced when an infected person coughs, sneezes, or talks,” according to the CDC. “These droplets can land in the mouths or noses of people who are nearby or possibly be inhaled into the lungs. Spread is more likely when people are in close contact with one another (within about 6 feet).
Several conservatives blasted Harris for the comparison.
This is legitimately one of the dumbest comparisons I have ever heard. https://t.co/k5VV9oOgfW
— Ben Shapiro (@benshapiro) August 12, 2020
Ebola was not a pandemic and Ebola did not make it ashore and spread in the United States. There’s a really big difference. https://t.co/My6gTUZBag
— Erick Erickson (@EWErickson) August 12, 2020
Can anyone honestly make the case that Obama’s “handling” of Ebola was the difference between a massive U.S. outbreak and the 2 cases we actually got?
— Tim Carney (@TPCarney) August 12, 2020
To compare Ebola with Covid is comparing the flu to a potato. Happy reading. https://t.co/IyVjZFspmh
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) August 12, 2020