Health systems in developing world need to be strengthened to stop Ebola-style outbreak

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Health systems throughout the developing world need to be strengthened to prevent another Ebola-style outbreak, or worse, warns Save the Children in its new report "A Wake Up Call: Lessons from Ebola for the World's Health Systems."

The report ranks the world's poorest countries on the state of their public health systems, finding that 28 have weaker defenses in place than Sierra Leone, where, alongside Liberia and Guinea, the current Ebola crisis has already claimed more than 9,500 lives.

The report also advises that prevention is better than cure, finding that the international Ebola relief effort in West Africa has cost $4.3 billion, whereas strengthening the health systems of those countries in the first place would have cost just $1.58 billion.

Ahead of an Ebola summit attended by world leaders in Brussels today, the charity warns that alongside immediate much needed support to Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, lessons need to be learnt and applied to other vulnerable countries around the world.

President and CEO of Save the Children USA, Carolyn Miles, said: "A robust health system could have helped get Ebola under control much sooner, saving thousands of children's lives and billions of dollars.

"Without trained health workers and a functioning health system in place, it's more likely that an epidemic could spread across international borders with catastrophic effects.

"The world woke up to Ebola, but now people need to wake up to the scandal of weak health systems, which not only risk new diseases spreading, but also contribute to the deaths of 17,000 children each day from preventable causes like pneumonia and malaria."

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