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Kerry Urges More Resources for Bioterrorism Threat

Candidate says the government is largely unprepared for an attack, and the 'broken' healthcare system complicates matters.

The Race to the White House

June 03, 2004|Maria L. La Ganga, Times Staff Writer

TAMPA, Fla. — Charging that the U.S. government is largely unprepared for a biological attack, Sen. John F. Kerry on Wednesday called for greater planning, more resources and increased international collaboration to help protect the nation from the threat of bioterrorism.

The presumptive Democratic candidate for president tied together the need for increased national security and an improved medical infrastructure, telling a polite audience that America's hospitals and emergency rooms are "not as ready as they ought to be."


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Public health facilities are hampered in detecting or responding to a biological attack, he said during a panel discussion at the University of South Florida, because they are "staggering beneath the everyday burdens of a broken healthcare system."

"I believe very deeply that we can be safer than we are today," Kerry said. "I don't believe we're taking all the steps that are available to us. I don't believe that we're as safe as we ought to have been in the aftermath of Sept. 11."

The Massachusetts senator said that he would make the prevention of bioterrorism a national priority and convene a meeting of experts within his first 100 days as president. Participants would be asked to create a comprehensive strategic plan to combat biological and chemical threats.

Kerry said he would also appoint a bioterrorism czar, beef up the public health system, establish a "meaningful" system to detect biological attacks and support research toward new vaccines and drugs to combat such threats. And, he said, he would seek to strengthen an international biological weapons ban by working with the British and other nations to add verification and inspections to the agreement, which he claimed the Bush administration has "specifically weakened."

Dr. Raymond Zilinskas, senior scientist at the Monterey Institute of International Studies, said that Kerry's approach is "pressing on the right buttons, but the question is, where's the money going to come from?"

Zilinskas said the main biological threat comes from nature, not man, in the form of emerging or imported infectious diseases.

"That's really a public health problem," he said. "What you need to do -- and I think the United States has been doing since the Clinton administration -- is to improve the public health planning and response."

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