Only a third of Ebola aid pledges delivered: study

Only about a third of the $2.89 billion (2.52 billion euros) in aid money pledged to fight Ebola was actually delivered as of December 31, according to an analysis in the British Medical Journal.

The report pointed to delays in the response since the first reports about the deadly outbreak in March 2014 and cited studies saying that "this may have contributed to the ongoing spread of the disease".

"Like the international response, contributions to fight the epidemic were slow to take off," said the report by Karen Grepin, assistant professor of global health policy at New York University.

The report, published on Tuesday, identified the United States as the top donor, saying it had disbursed $855 million (746 million euros) by December 31.

It was followed by Britain, the World Bank, Germany, France and Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, a US philanthropist who sent $55 million.

A total of $1.09 billion had been delivered by the end of 2014—around 38 percent of the total pledged.

"We need a mechanism to enable more rapid disbursement of funds to fight public health threats such as Ebola," the report said, adding that "existing contracting mechanisms are too slow".

The World Health Organization was first alerted to the current outbreak of the Ebola virus in March last year but only declared a public health emergency of international concern in August, the report said.

The first $500 million of aid only arrived in mid-October and the total reached $1.0 billion only in December, with Liberia being the single biggest recipient of aid ($882 million).

Quoting figures as of December 31, the report said the World Bank had pledged $230 million but disbursed only $117 million, although it added that that the data did not cover loans to the affected countries.

The World Bank said in a statement on Wednesday that it had pledged $518 million to date, of which $283 million had been disbursed.

It said that total World Bank Group commitments to the Ebola response totalled about $1.0 billion, including money from its private sector arm, the International Finance Corporation.

Journal information: British Medical Journal (BMJ)

© 2015 AFP

Citation: Only a third of Ebola aid pledges delivered: study (2015, February 4) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-02-ebola-aid-pledges.html
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