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Opinion: Shortchanging global health now will cost us later

A council worker sprays disinfectant while cleaning up a market in Antananarivo, Madagascar, in October 2017 during an outbreak of plague.

The White House recently released a report outlining the progress and investments the U.S. has made to make the world safer from the threat of epidemics. But the key to epidemic preparedness and response is the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, whose operations abroad will radically scale back due to looming funding cuts.

Every global health security expert warns us that it’s not a matter of whether the next deadly that an epidemic such as the 1918 Spanish Flu could cost as much as 5 percent of global GDP.

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