Wednesday, September 17, 2014 8:47:13 PM
The US is committing troops and money to West Africa as a humanitarian relief effort. The fight going on is a relief effort.
Kallo's business is not relief. When Ebola has been defeated what do they do with the clinics etc that they have supplied, just re-tool? Ebola diagnosis and isolation is tremendously specific so the amount of work to do that would be massive. That is leaving aside the fact that the fight against Ebola is a relief effort. Kallo builds healthcare infrastructure to serve a wider purpose.
Sure, if they were to have their infrastructure on the ground right now it would help tremendously but the real benefit to Kallo's technology is in the prevention of the outbreak not the prevention of the spread.
So naive for a number of reasons, it's not what they do. I'm sure that if they approached the US government there would be all kinds of RFQ's to answer, security clearances etc etc. The US government is committing $500m to the fight, the sales cycle for this would be more than a month or two. It's not what Kallo does, oh yeah, I mentioned that.
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