President Barack Obama announced the United States will raise its response to the Ebola crisis in West Africa with plans to build 17 treatment centers, train thousands of healthcare workers and establish a military control center for coordination, according to The Associated Press.

The president will visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta on Tuesday to show his commitment to the issue during the stepped-up effort, which includes some 3,000 military forces and a joint forces command center in Monrovia, Liberia to coordinate efforts with the U.S. government and other international partners, the AP reported.

The plan will "ensure that the entire international response effort is more effective and helps to scale up to turn the tide in this crisis," a senior administration official told reporters on Monday, ahead of the president's trip, according to the AP.

"The significant expansion that the President will detail ... really represents a set of areas where the U.S. military will bring unique capabilities that we believe will improve the effectiveness of the entire global response," he said, the AP reported.

Obama's administration has requested an additional $88 million from Congress to fight Ebola, including $58 million to speed production of the ZMapp experimental antiviral drug and two Ebola vaccine candidates, according to the AP.

The U.S. Agency for International Development will also support a program to distribute protection kits with sanitizers and medical supplies to 400,000 vulnerable households in Liberia, the AP reported.

The treatment centers will have 100 beds each and be built as soon as possible, an official said, according to the AP.

A site will be established where military medical personnel will teach some 500 healthcare workers per week for six months or more how to provide care to Ebola patients, officials said, the AP reported.

The WHO estimates that the hardest-hit countries, Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, need at least three to four times the number of medical and public health workers currently on the ground, or another 600 doctors to care for patients and 1,000 workers to track and test their contacts, the only way the disease can be controlled, according to the AP.