The $25 million donation by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, tops contributions that entire countries have made. Still, the list of needs in fighting Ebola is long.
The $25 million donation tops
contributions that entire countries have made: Britain has donated $18.8
million, Germany $15.3 million, Australia $13.9 million, China $8.3
million, France $6.6 million, and Canada $4.3 million, according to the
Financial Tracking Service, which is managed by the United Nations
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
Observers
from both the health industry and the philanthropy community say the
contribution by Zuckerberg and Ms. Chan is extremely valuable – first
for the resources it can supply, and also for the message it sends to
other wealthy individuals, as well as countries.
“Yes,
I believe that this contribution is a terrific step in the right
direction,” says Robert Leggiadro, a biology instructor at Villanova
University near Philadelphia and a former senior associate at the
American College of Physicians.
But
Mr. Leggiadro also says he isn’t sure how far the money will go because
the list of needs is long, including training, education, personal
protective equipment, and disinfectant kits.
“Based on what we are
learning from the evolving Dallas experience,” he says, referring to
the city with the first US patients diagnosed with Ebola, “there is
still much to be done in the areas of education, as well as material and
human resources.”
Zuckerberg,
in fact, is not the first wealthy individual to make sizable donations
in the fight against Ebola. Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen has given
$20 million, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has announced a
$50 million contribution to United Nations agencies and other
international organizations involved in the Ebola response, according to
Forbes.
Still, by Zuckerberg’s own standards, the $25 million contribution might not be quite as much as it may seem initially.
“[T]he
lump sum, generous as it is, barely holds a candle to previous gifts
from the social network founder,...” writes Nina Strochlic in The Daily
Beast. She points out that Zuckerberg and Chan set a record for
charitable giving in 2013 when they gave 18 million Facebook shares,
worth more than $970 million, to the Silicon Valley Community
Foundation. Zuckerberg’s net worth is reportedly about $29.7 billion.
Maggi
Alexander, director of the Center for Global Philanthropy at The
Philanthropic Initiative, which is based in Boston, sees an opportunity
for big donations to make a difference in the coordination of Ebola
efforts.
“We need
up-to-the-moment data, and a map of who is doing what and where....
[T]he West African health systems ultimately need to be strengthened,”
she writes in an e-mail. “Zuckerberg and other tech funders could
contribute so much by helping establish better systems of coordination
and collaboration.”
At the
least, many observers are hopeful that the contribution by Zuckerberg
and Chan will encourage more giving and raise awareness.
“It
seems generous to me and will spur others to give, certainly,” says Dr.
Jeff Ritter, professor of health services at Barry University in Miami
Shores, Fla. The Ebola outbreak has “become a critical topic ... and
certainly needs to be addressed, and when a high-profile individual like
this gives support, it brings much helpful attention to the fact that
we need to be prepared as much as possible.
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