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A thought-provoking discussion by a panel of experts launches the first in the Center for Health Innovation's Rapid Response series.

Adelphi Provost Gayle Insler (center) with CHI speakers (from left): Victor Politi, Donna Armellino, Lawrence Eisenstein, Elizabeth Gross Cohn,听Samuel L. Stanley, Barry Rosenthal, Zainab Attahiru, L. Reuven Pasternak

Author Stephen King described it as 鈥渙ne of the most horrifying things I’ve read in my whole life.” The so-called master of horror wasn鈥檛 referring to one of his own stories but to Richard Preston’s听 bestselling 1995 nonfiction thriller The Hot Zone, which introduced millions of readers to Ebola and its devastating effects.

Fast-forward to 2014 and the . We鈥檙e inundated with reports and images of suffering victims waiting outside overwhelmed hospitals, travelers being screened at airports and healthcare workers engulfed in head-to-toe protective equipment to avoid infection. And has been propelled back to the bestseller lists. Could the New York metropolitan region, a hub for international travel, be the gateway for an Ebola outbreak on our shores? Is Long Island prepared if this should occur? Can you get Ebola from a bowling ball? Or are we needlessly panicking?

Addressing concerns and educating both healthcare workers and the general public about Ebola was a natural fit for the , which aims 鈥渢o be a local thought leader and think tank for emerging and urgent public health issues,鈥 according to , director. The panel discussion on November 6, 2014, titled 鈥淓bola and Beyond: Are We Ready?鈥 was the first in CHI鈥檚 Rapid Response series, which will 鈥渂ring together content experts and key stakeholders to explore the economic, political, social, environmental and cultural aspects of emerging public health issues from a transdisciplinary perspective,鈥 she said.听

Dr. Cohn engaged , president of Stony Brook University and one of the nation鈥檚 leading experts in virology and infectious disease research, to present the keynote and moderate the panel discussion.听The panelists represented a local who鈥檚 who of healthcare leadership and expertise:

  • CEO and vice president for health systems at Stony Brook University Hospital
  • president and CEO of the NuHealth System (Nassau Health Care Corporation)
  • vice president for infection prevention at North Shore-LIJ Health System
  • commissioner of the Nassau County Department of Health
  • Barry Rosenthal, M.D., director of Winthrop-University Hospital, Department of Emergency Medicine
  • Zainab Attahiru, M.S.N., R.N., nurse researcher and Jonas Nurse Leader Scholar, who spoke of her nursing experiences in Sierra Leone

The event generated so much interest that the location was moved from Alumni House to the larger in the . Dr. Cohn said that in addition to the 170 audience members, the event was streamed live to roughly 30 institutions from Suffolk County to New York City and Washington, D.C., and is available online (scroll down or click to access), where it has garnered more than 200 views.听

Philip Alcabes, Ph.D., a professor in Adelphi鈥檚 and author of听Dread: How Fear and Fantasy Have Fueled Epidemics From the Black Death to Avian Flu, started off the evening听by providing historical context and stressing the importance of distinguishing between facts and fears. He was followed by Dr. Stanley, who gave a crash course on evolving, mutating microbes; the pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, ecology and epidemiology of Ebola; biosecurity in a flat world; and potential Ebola drugs, diagnostics and vaccines in the pipeline.听

The discussion then turned to how Long Island is preparing for the Ebola threat. Panelists assuaged fears and concerns by explaining that Ebola is not airborne and how their facilities have taken steps to treat infected patients and train healthcare workers and emergency responders.

As Laura Wachel, an undergraduate nursing student at Adelphi, noted, 鈥淭hey debunked the myths” perpetuated by those 鈥渓ooking at this from an emotional rather than scientific point of view.鈥

The discussion went beyond Ebola (as Dr. Stanley stated, 鈥淢ore people will die of influenza during this flu season鈥) and beyond our borders. Panelists emphasized that as humanitarians, we have a responsibility to address what Attahiru described as the 鈥渇ear, anguish and hopelessness鈥 in Sierra Leone by investing in biomedical research and public health infrastructure on a global level. Perhaps the real horror story here is not a deadly virus but human indifference. As Dr. Alcabes noted, 鈥淚f there鈥檚 a real crisis in America, it鈥檚 that we鈥檙e not terribly interested in western Africa and most of the poor world.鈥

鈥淲e know that what happens around the world will impact us here,鈥 Dr. Eisenstein said. 鈥淲hile we are saddened by the tragic events that have led to this and the lives that have been lost, a lot of good can come of this and many, many lives can be saved.” He added that when we invest in public health, 鈥渢he whole world benefits from it.鈥



For further information, please contact:

Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director
p 鈥 516.237.8634
e 鈥 twilson@adelphi.edu

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