Public Health Resilience Checklist for High-Consequence Infectious Diseases-Informed by the Domestic Ebola Response in the United States

The experiences of communities that responded to confirmed cases of Ebola virus disease in the United States provide a rare opportunity for collective learning to improve resilience to future high-consequence infectious disease events. Key informant interviews (n = 73) were conducted between Februar...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of public health management and practice 2018-11, Vol.24 (6), p.510-518
Hauptverfasser: Sell, Tara Kirk, Shearer, Matthew P, Meyer, Diane, Chandler, Hannah, Schoch-Spana, Monica, Thomas, Erin, Rose, Dale A, Carbone, Eric G, Toner, Eric
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container_end_page 518
container_issue 6
container_start_page 510
container_title Journal of public health management and practice
container_volume 24
creator Sell, Tara Kirk
Shearer, Matthew P
Meyer, Diane
Chandler, Hannah
Schoch-Spana, Monica
Thomas, Erin
Rose, Dale A
Carbone, Eric G
Toner, Eric
description The experiences of communities that responded to confirmed cases of Ebola virus disease in the United States provide a rare opportunity for collective learning to improve resilience to future high-consequence infectious disease events. Key informant interviews (n = 73) were conducted between February and November 2016 with individuals who participated in Ebola virus disease planning or response in Atlanta, Georgia; Dallas, Texas; New York, New York; or Omaha, Nebraska; or had direct knowledge of response activities. Participants represented health care; local, state, and federal public health; law; local and state emergency management; academia; local and national media; individuals affected by the response; and local and state governments. Two focus groups were then conducted in New York and Dallas, and study results were vetted with an expert advisory group. Participants focused on a number of important areas to improve public health resilience to high-consequence infectious disease events, including governance and leadership, communication and public trust, quarantine and the law, monitoring programs, environmental decontamination, and waste management. Findings provided the basis for an evidence-informed checklist outlining specific actions for public health authorities to take to strengthen public health resilience to future high-consequence infectious disease events.
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subjects Disaster Planning - methods
Disease Outbreaks - prevention & control
Disease Outbreaks - statistics & numerical data
Ebolavirus - pathogenicity
Focus Groups - methods
Georgia
Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola - diagnosis
Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola - prevention & control
Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola - therapy
Humans
Interviews as Topic - methods
Nebraska
New York
Public Health - instrumentation
Public Health - methods
Public Health - standards
Quarantine - legislation & jurisprudence
Quarantine - methods
Texas
title Public Health Resilience Checklist for High-Consequence Infectious Diseases-Informed by the Domestic Ebola Response in the United States
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