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The Fears of the Rich, the Needs of the Poor

My Years at the CDC

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

William H. Foege, one of the most respected leaders in global public health, takes readers on a tour of his time at the CDC.

In its seventy years, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has evolved from a malaria control program to an institution dedicated to improving health for all people across the world. The Fears of the Rich, The Needs of the Poor is a revealing account of the CDC's development by its former director, public health luminary William H. Foege.

Dr. Foege tells the stories of pivotal moments in public health, including the eradication of smallpox (made possible due in part to Foege's research) and the discovery of Legionnaires' disease, Reye syndrome, toxic shock syndrome, and HIV/AIDS. With good humor and optimism, he recounts the various crises he surmounted, from threats of terrorist attacks to contentious congressional hearings and funding cuts. Highlighting the people who made possible some of public health's biggest successes, Foege outlines the work required behind the scenes and describes the occasional tensions between professionals in the field and the politicians in charge of oversight.

In recent years, global public health initiatives have come from unanticipated sources. Giants in the field now include President Jimmy Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, who promote programs aimed at neglected diseases. Melinda and Bill Gates have invigorated the field through research and direct program support, especially in the area of vaccine-preventable diseases. And the Merck Mectizan program has dramatically reduced river blindness in Africa. Foege has been involved in all of these efforts, among others, and he brings to this book the knowledge and wisdom derived from a long and accomplished career. The Fears of the Rich, The Needs of the Poor is an inviting but unvarnished account of that career and offers a plethora of lessons for those interested in public health.

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    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2018
      Wisdom gleaned throughout the career of the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Foege (Emeritus, International Health/Emory Univ.; House on Fire: The Fight to Eradicate Smallpox, 2011), who was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2012, has personally witnessed the agency's evolution alongside many changes in global health. Beginning with a harrowing bioterrorism threat depicted in the opening story, which inspired a CDC defense program, readers will get a sense of the enormity of the agency's responsibility to safeguard global health. As a collective, these condensed experiences represent many key moments in Foege's tenure with the agency and spotlight some of the CDC's significant accomplishments and enduring challenges, including the blight of Legionnaire's disease and the overwhelming devastation of AIDS. These issues form the springboard for more of the author's intensive discussions of the precariousness of vaccine therapy and immunization programs and the ultimate challenge in retaining established immunization levels when countered, in part, by parents who "no longer compare the risks of vaccine to the risk of the disease." Foege offers a brief but thoughtful history of the CDC, its protocols, and its complicated history of political entanglements, which, to the author, have a tendency to prove more counterproductive than supportive. Alternately, he notes the presence of "plenty of humor" within agency meetings, daily interactions, and other events. Foege details how he ascended to the director post following 15 years of CDC association, participating in disease outbreak investigations and completing one of his most prestigious achievements: the development of a strategic plan to eradicate the smallpox virus. He also passes on the wisdom of his CDC years in declaring that the key to effective public health advocacy lies in an "appropriate response" from official agencies and offers advice on contemporary hot-button issues--e.g., gun safety, tobacco, and evolution--that have been marred by public irrationality.A straightforward, informative chronicle of the CDC and one of its most dedicated, prominent officials.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2018

      Foege (emeritus, international health, Emory Univ.), formerly director of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), provides a retrospective window into American public health, combining history and memoir while tracing national and international developments in U.S. policy. The personal narrative chronicles the author's service as a U.S. public health officer, his aid efforts in Africa, and his years at the CDC. Full of candid commentary on the approaches to public health policy that both work and don't work, the text explains the political forces behind these decisions. Foege's delightful, honest, and sometimes quite humorous and moving writing covers a range of topics, from injury prevention efforts at the CDC to toxic shock syndrome and AIDS. These discussions can help nonspecialist readers understand how epidemiological studies work and offer insight into why it seems to many that important decisions are delayed. VERDICT Readers interested in the history of American public health efforts will be informed and by turns enlightened and entertained by this engaging work.--Aaron Klink, Duke Univ., Durham, NC

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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