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Revelation: Secret government warehouses stockpiling $7 billion worth of medical...

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(NaturalNews) Is it "crazy" and "paranoid" to stockpile supplies against the possibility of widespread social collapse? Not according to the federal government.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) maintains six warehouses stockpiled billions of dollars worth of medical supplies to be used to respond to any national medical emergency, including a flu pandemic or terrorist attack. Both the contents and locations of the warehouses are kept secret by law.

"If everybody knows exactly what we have, then you know exactly what you can do to us that we can't fix," said Greg Burel, who directs the program, known as the Strategic National Stockpile.

The Strategic National Stockpile was launched in 1999, with a $50 million budget. The value of the stockpile now exceeds $7 billion.
 

Enormously expensive project

The warehouses are enormous; Burel describes them as two Super Walmarts side-by-side, without the drop ceiling.

Nell Greenfieldboyce of National Public Radio, who recently became the first reporter allowed to visit one of the warehouses, said that "shelves packed with stuff stand so tall that looking up makes me dizzy."

Although the specific contents of the stockpile are classified, the CDC says that, in general terms, the stockpiles contain millions of vaccine doses (for both pandemic and bioterrorist events), radiation treatments, antidotes to chemical weapons, and standard medical supplies such as antibiotics, IV fluid and wound care supplies. Greenfieldboyce writes of an entire caged, locked section of the warehouse that she was told contain addictive painkillers, and a giant freezer for the storage of more perishable drugs.

Maintaining the stockpile costs the government an enormous amount of money. Among the items stockpiled are ventilators that need to be charged monthly and receive yearly maintenance. Additionally, the entire stockpile must be inventoried annually, and expired drugs must be discarded and replaced.

From its starting $50 million, the stockpile's annual budget has now ballooned to half a billion dollars.
 

But would it deliver as promised?

Public health specialists and others have raised serious concerns over how helpful the stockpiles would be in a real crisis, however.

For one thing, the stockpile has tended in recent years to stock up on newer drugs, which tend to be more expensive and have a shorter life. This means significantly higher costs, building over the long term. But even as the expenses of the stockpile continue to grow, its budget has not kept pace.


 


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