Literature DB >> 22455681

The people's role in U.S. national health security: past, present, and future.

Monica Schoch-Spana1.   

Abstract

Over the past decade, assumptions have been made and unmade about what officials can expect of average people confronting a bioterrorist attack or other major health incident. The reframing of the public in national discourse and doctrine from a panic-stricken mob to a band of hearty survivors is a positive development and more realistic in terms of the empirical record. So, too, is the realization that citizen contributions to national health security encompass not only individual preparedness and volunteerism but also mutual aid and collective deliberation of the tough choices posed by health disasters. In projecting what needs to occur over the next 10 years in biosecurity, 2 priority challenges emerge: retaining the lesson that a public prone to panic, social disorder, and civil unrest is a myth, and building an infrastructure to bolster the public's full contributions to health emergency management.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22455681     DOI: 10.1089/bsp.2011.0108

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosecur Bioterror        ISSN: 1538-7135


  2 in total

1.  Preparedness Perceptions, Sociodemographic Characteristics, and Level of Household Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies: Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, 2006-2010.

Authors:  Summer D DeBastiani; Tara W Strine; Sara J Vagi; Daniel J Barnett; Emily B Kahn
Journal:  Health Secur       Date:  2015-09-08

2.  Transnational quarantine rhetorics: public mobilization in SARS and in H1N1 flu.

Authors:  Huiling Ding
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2014-06
  2 in total

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