"A little while back I did a short post expressing
skepticism about some claims that corruption was a significant
contributor to the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. I agree that insofar
as corruption diverts resources from public health and sanitation, or
leads to undersupply of necessary medicines and supplies, it is likely
to worsen both the frequency and magnitude of public health problems.
But I was more skeptical that there was any direct evidence that the
admittedly rampant corruption in places like Liberia, Sierra Leone, and
Nigeria was a major contributor to that particular public health crisis.
"Last month I was fortunate enough to moderate a panel on corruption and public health at the World Bank’s International Corruption Hunters Alliance meeting,
and the presentations at that panel have altered my thinking about this
issue somewhat. More generally, several of the presenters from
countries hit hard by Ebola — including Commissioner Joseph Kamara of Sierra Leone’s Anti-Corruption Commission and Commissioner Aba Hamilton-Dolo of
the Liberian Anti-Corruption Commission — made a convincing case that
corruption has been, if not a primary cause, then at least a significant
contributor to the extent and severity of the Ebola outbreak."
Read the full post by Matthew Stephenson, in the Global Anticorruption Blog. http://globalanticorruptionblog.com/2015/01/22/trust-in-government-and-public-health-corruption-and-ebola-revisited/
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