Everyone still happy with CDC?
"Happy" with them?
The CDC is a government agency that serves a multitude of functions. In addition to medical doctors, they are PhD microbiologists, epidemiologists, theoreticians, etc. Many of them work in an office and are empowered to make policy, after considering a multitude of variables, possible scenarios, and collating vast amounts of information. As such, they can be subject to "group think" as any other large collection of very intelligent people with strong individual opinions often can, especially when in the end everyone has to ultimately agree to a plan of action.
The CDC's role is, in part, to disseminate information. It is also to instill a "Keep Calm and Carry On" mentality. It is, by default, an Ivory Tower. As such they are not necessarily - and I'm not talk about their insertion teams who go to sites to manage emerging problems - equipped to understand the situations of individual healthcare systems unless and until they are there. Then, and only then, you often get an
ex post facto (i.e., Monday morning quarterback) analysis of what happened as opposed to what should've happened.
I think that's going on here. Clearly the case in Dallas demonstrates the holes in our current surveillance and interdiction system in the U.S., as a case clearly slipped through the cracks. And, that's the point. The CDC can't really give anyone assurances that this won't happen again, despite how much awareness campaigning they do. A patient - with Ebola - went to a hospital, told the staff there he was sick and had just come from Liberia, yet he was allowed to go back into the community after being discharged with antibiotics and coming in contact with, and potentially exposing, at least 18 individuals.
That's the point. The CDC may be idealistic in their assessment of the situation, but this is a real-world example of what can happen even in the most advanced healthcare system in the world.
So, "happy" with them? I don't really expect much. Then again, I work in the real world. And, I can tell you that we are not prepared. I think the CDC knows this. But, the message remains... "Keep Calm and Carry On." That, and the hope that we'll simply dodge the bullet... again.