As global health threats evolved, the CDC didn't
Vanquishing disease is in the DNA of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the federal agency that in its first decade of existence oversaw the eradication of smallpox, the elimination of malaria and the stamping out of polio as threats to Americans' health.
But as the director of the 75-year-old agency acknowledged this week, the CDC hasn't evolved to keep up with the faster speed and higher stakes of germs in the modern world.
In the face of a historic threat — the emergence of a novel virus that has killed more than 1 million Americans — "our performance did not reliably meet expectations," Dr. Rochelle Walensky told CDC employees in a bracing call for change.
The arrival of monkeypox has already brought the agency's creaky machinery in for further criticism. Failure to improve could spell extinction
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