為達最佳瀏覽效果,建議使用 Chrome、Firefox 或 Microsoft Edge 的瀏覽器。

請至Edge官網下載 請至FireFox官網下載 請至Google官網下載
晴時多雲

限制級
您即將進入之新聞內容 需滿18歲 方可瀏覽。
根據「電腦網路內容分級處理辦法」修正條文第六條第三款規定,已於網站首頁或各該限制級網頁,依台灣網站分級推廣基金會規定作標示。 台灣網站分級推廣基金會(TICRF)網站:http://www.ticrf.org.tw

《TAIPEI TIMES》 Bill seeks US-Taiwan disease center

US Senator Tom Cotton questions US Attorney General Merrick Garland during a US Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington on Oct. 27.
Photo: Reuters

US Senator Tom Cotton questions US Attorney General Merrick Garland during a US Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington on Oct. 27. Photo: Reuters

2021/11/07 03:00

EARLY WARNING: The proposed center would operate under the AIT and could employ Taiwanese and CDC personnel, US Senator Tom Cotton said in a statement

/ Staff writer, with CNA, WASHINGTON

Several members of the US Congress on Friday introduced a bill to establish a “US-Taiwan Infectious Disease Monitoring Center” that would work with Taiwan’s Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for the early detection of infectious diseases in the region.

The planned center would operate under the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT), according the proposed US-Taiwan Public Health Protection Act.

It would be staffed by US government employees, including at least three infectious-disease experts from the US Department of Health and Human Services, and at least one staff member from another federal department, the bill says.

It could also employ Taiwanese and CDC personnel, said a news release issued by US Senator Tom Cotton, a Republican, who introduced the bill along with US Representative Ro Khanna, a Democrat, and others.

The bill would seek the appropriation of US$1.6 million for the fiscal year 2022 and US$1.35 million each year from 2023 to the US Department of State and the AIT to be used for personnel and management expenses related to the center.

“The center shall seek to partner with Taiwan’s CDC to conduct health monitoring of infectious diseases in the region by regularly monitoring, analyzing and disseminating open-source material from countries in the region, including viral strains, bacterial subtypes and other pathogens,” the bill says.

It would also monitor infectious diseases originating in the region, contact regional medical and health officials, and provide expertise on health threats to the US and Taiwanese governments, it says.

“Our bill will ensure the United States has the resources it needs to monitor health threats emerging in the Indo-Pacific and will allow Taiwan to share its knowledge with the world,” Cotton said.

“For too long, the United States has been myopically focused on traditional national security issues and it has hurt our ability to promptly respond to new threats like the COVID-19 pandemic. We must learn from countries like Taiwan that grasped the dangers of this pandemic early on and had success in suppressing it,” Khanna said.

Other cosponsors of the bill are Democratic US senators Catherine Cortez Masto and Jeff Merkley, Republican US Senator Marco Rubio and Republican US Representative Michael Waltz.

新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES

不用抽 不用搶 現在用APP看新聞 保證天天中獎  點我下載APP  按我看活動辦法

焦點今日熱門
看更多!請加入自由時報粉絲團

網友回應

載入中
此網頁已閒置超過5分鐘,請點擊透明黑底或右下角 X 鈕。