Quantifying Disaster Impacts on Local Public Health Agency’s Leadership, Staffing, and Provision of Essential Public Health Services

Objective:The objective of this study is to assess the impact that natural disaster response has on local health departments’ (LHD) ability to continue to provide essential public health services.Methods:A web-based survey was sent to all North Carolina Local Health Directors. The survey asked respo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Disaster medicine and public health preparedness 2022-08, Vol.16 (4), p.1552-1557
Hauptverfasser: Clay, Lauren A., Stone, Kahler W., Horney, Jennifer A.
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container_end_page 1557
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1552
container_title Disaster medicine and public health preparedness
container_volume 16
creator Clay, Lauren A.
Stone, Kahler W.
Horney, Jennifer A.
description Objective:The objective of this study is to assess the impact that natural disaster response has on local health departments’ (LHD) ability to continue to provide essential public health services.Methods:A web-based survey was sent to all North Carolina Local Health Directors. The survey asked respondents to report on LHD functioning following Hurricanes Florence (2018) and Dorian (2019).Results:After Hurricane Florence, the positions who most frequently had regular duties postponed or interrupted were leadership (15 of 48; 31.3%), and professional staff (e.g., nursing and epidemiology: 11 of 48; 22.9%). Staffing shelters for all phases – from disaster response through long-term recovery – was identified as a burden by LHDs, particularly for nursing staff. Approximately 66.6% of LHD jurisdictions opened an Emergency Operations Center (EOC) or activated Incident Command System in response to both hurricanes. If an EOC was activated, the LHD was statistically, significantly more likely to report that normal duties had been interrupted across every domain assessed.Conclusions:The ability of LHDs to perform regular activities and provide essential public health services is impacted by their obligations to support disaster response. Better metrics are needed to measure the impacts to estimate indirect public health impacts of disasters.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/dmp.2021.193
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The survey asked respondents to report on LHD functioning following Hurricanes Florence (2018) and Dorian (2019).Results:After Hurricane Florence, the positions who most frequently had regular duties postponed or interrupted were leadership (15 of 48; 31.3%), and professional staff (e.g., nursing and epidemiology: 11 of 48; 22.9%). Staffing shelters for all phases – from disaster response through long-term recovery – was identified as a burden by LHDs, particularly for nursing staff. Approximately 66.6% of LHD jurisdictions opened an Emergency Operations Center (EOC) or activated Incident Command System in response to both hurricanes. If an EOC was activated, the LHD was statistically, significantly more likely to report that normal duties had been interrupted across every domain assessed.Conclusions:The ability of LHDs to perform regular activities and provide essential public health services is impacted by their obligations to support disaster response. 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source Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Departments
Disaster management
Disasters
Emergency preparedness
Environmental health
Epidemiology
Evacuations & rescues
Health services
Health surveillance
Hurricanes
Infectious diseases
Jurisdiction
Natural disasters
Nursing
Public health
Workforce planning
title Quantifying Disaster Impacts on Local Public Health Agency’s Leadership, Staffing, and Provision of Essential Public Health Services
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