| Literature DB >> 29155656 |
Jordan W Tappero, Cynthia H Cassell, Rebecca E Bunnell, Frederick J Angulo, Allen Craig, Nicki Pesik, Benjamin A Dahl, Kashef Ijaz, Hamid Jafari, Rebecca Martin.
Abstract
To achieve compliance with the revised World Health Organization International Health Regulations (IHR 2005), countries must be able to rapidly prevent, detect, and respond to public health threats. Most nations, however, remain unprepared to manage and control complex health emergencies, whether due to natural disasters, emerging infectious disease outbreaks, or the inadvertent or intentional release of highly pathogenic organisms. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) works with countries and partners to build and strengthen global health security preparedness so they can quickly respond to public health crises. This report highlights selected CDC global health protection platform accomplishments that help mitigate global health threats and build core, cross-cutting capacity to identify and contain disease outbreaks at their source. CDC contributions support country efforts to achieve IHR 2005 compliance, contribute to the international framework for countering infectious disease crises, and enhance health security for Americans and populations around the world.Entities:
Keywords: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Field Epidemiology Training Program; International Health Regulations; emergency response; global health protection; global health security; public health; vaccine-preventable diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29155656 PMCID: PMC5711315 DOI: 10.3201/eid2313.170946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Selected US CDC global health protection platform accomplishments*
| Global health protection accomplishments | Number | Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency mitigation of global health threats | ||
| Ending the West Africa Ebola outbreak | ||
| CDC staff deployments overall, domestic and international | >3,500 | 2014–2016 |
| Departing passengers in the 3 affected countries screened for Ebola virus disease | >339,000 | 2014–2016 |
| Vaccinations of health workers in Ebola trial | >8,000 | 2015 |
| Days of continuous operation of high-throughput laboratory capacity in Sierra Leone; >23,000 specimens tested | 421 | 2014–2015 |
| US healthcare workers trained in Anniston, AL, to work in West Africa | >600 | 2015 |
| GRRT | ||
| CDC-trained GRRT experts prepared to deploy on short notice to a public health emergency | >400 | 2017 (Jun) |
| GRRT mobilizations (>14,000 cumulative person-days), supporting responses to global health emergencies including Zika, yellow fever, cholera, measles, polio, and Ebola | >420 | 2015–2017 (Jun) |
| Rapid humanitarian responses | ||
| Staff deployments in response to public health humanitarian emergencies in >40 countries | >380 | 2011–2016 |
| Staff deployments to 6 countries in response to Syria crisis | 85 | 2012–2016 |
| Countries with morbidity/mortality surveillance systems implemented in response to Horn of Africa famine | 3 | 2011–2012 |
| PHEM program | ||
| Fellows from 28 countries trained through CDC PHEM fellowship | 69 | 2013–2017 (Jun) |
| Countries that have received CDC emergency management technical assistance and training | 56 | 2013–2016 |
| Countries that participated in a real and/or simulated response with CDC technical assistance | 19 | 2013–2016 |
| Global Disease Detection Operations Center | ||
| Serious public health threats assessed | >1,500 | 2007–2016 |
| Countries where serious outbreaks were investigated/contained, where CDC provided technical assistance | >190 | 2007–2016 |
| Unique diseases tracked globally | >170 | 2007–2016 |
| Outbreaks monitored and reported in >130 countries for ≈40 different diseases | ≈300 | 2016 |
| GDD activities | ||
| GDD regional centers | 10 | 2006–2016 |
| New diagnostic tests established in national or regional laboratories | >380 | 2006–2016 |
| New strains/pathogens detected and/or discovered (new to the world, new to country or region, or new modes of transmission likely because of increased ability to detect through newly introduced laboratory tests) in which GDD assisted in detection and identification | 79 | 2006–2016 |
| Outbreaks responded to by GDD center that provided epidemiology and/or laboratory assistance | 2,051 | 2006–2016 |
| Outbreak investigations in which laboratory support was provided | 1,363 | 2006–2016 |
| Participants who received public health trainings conducted at national and/or regional level on topics, including epidemiology, laboratory, all-hazards preparedness, and risk communication | 115,566 | 2006–2016 |
| Capacity-building partnerships to contain threats at the source | ||
| GHSA implementation | ||
| GHSA countries: 17 Phase I countries, 14 Phase II countries, and CARICOM† | >31 | 2015–2017 (Mar) |
| Phase I countries with enhanced surveillance systems for zoonotic diseases | 13 | 2015–2017 (Mar) |
| Countries that detected dangerous pathogens using new equipment and capabilities | 16 | 2015–2017 (Mar) |
| Phase I countries supported in development of Emergency Operations Centers | 16 | 2015–2017 (Mar) |
| Joint External Evaluation | ||
| GHSA assessments conducted before tool finalization | 6 | 2016 |
| Evaluations completed | 52 | 2016–2017 (Jul) |
| Public health workforce development | ||
| Countries with CDC-supported FETPs | 65 | 1980–2016 |
| Graduates of FETPs-Advanced | >3,900 | 1982–2016 |
| Outbreaks investigated by FETPs-Advanced trainees | >3,300 | 2005–2016 |
| New FETPs-Frontline started | 24 | 2014–2016 |
| Participants in FETPs-Frontline | >1,860 | 2015–2016 |
| Global vaccine-preventable disease activities | ||
| STOP program volunteers trained in surveillance principles to detect and respond to cases of polio and other vaccine-preventable diseases | 2,010 | 1998–2017 (Jul) |
| Countries with volunteers deployed for the STOP program | 77 | 1998–2016 |
| Countries supported by CDC to build national STOP programs | 4 | 1998–2016 |
| NPHIs | ||
| Members of International Association of National Public Health Institutes and supported by CDC | >100 | 2016 |
| Countries receiving NPHI development support from CDC | >20 | 2016 |
| Persons across the globe served by NPHIs | 5 billion | 2016 |
*CARICOM, Caribbean Community; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; FETP, field epidemiology training program; GDD, Global Disease Detection; GHSA, Global Health Security Agenda; GRRT, Global Rapid Response Team; NPHI, National Public Health Institute; PHEM, public health emergency management; STOP, Stop Transmission of Polio. †CARICOM is an organization of 15 Caribbean nations and dependencies. In 2015, the US government committed to accelerating GHSA implementation with 31 countries and CARICOM (Figure 1). In 17 Phase I, 14 Phase II, and CARICOM nations (Figure 1), CDC provides technical assistance to support country capacity assessments, the development of 5-year GHSA road maps, and annual GHSA implementation plans. In the Phase I countries, CDC also provides financial support for implementation of the GHSA action packages (Table 2) (–).
Figure 1Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA) member countries as of July 25, 2017 (https://www.ghsagenda.org/members). *GHSA member countries that are not directly supported by the US government. †US government–supported GHSA member countries. CDC provides technical assistance to support country capacity assessments, the development of 5-year GHSA road maps, and annual GHSA implementation plans in Phase I, Phase II, and CARICOM nations. In the Phase I countries, CDC also provides financial support for implementation of the GHSA Action Packages. ‡CARICOM is an organization of 15 island nations. CARICOM, Caribbean Community; GHSA, Global Health Security Agenda.
Global Health Security Agenda’s prevent, detect, and respond framework against infectious disease threats and its 11 measurable action packages (,)
| Steps and actions |
| Prevent: systems, policies, and procedures to mitigate avoidable outbreaks |
| Surveillance to guide slowing of antimicrobial resistance |
| National biosecurity system |
| Policies and practices that reduce the risk of zoonotic disease transmission |
| Immunization of 90% of children |
| Detect: a national surveillance and laboratory system capable of reliable testing for >5 of 10 core tests relevant to the country’s epidemiologic profile on specimens from disease clusters in >80% of districts |
| Standardized surveillance for 3 core syndromes |
| Regional and national interoperable electronic reporting systems |
| Timely reporting to World Health Organization (WHO), World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE), and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) |
| Multidisciplinary public health workforce with ≥1 epidemiologist per 200,000 population |
| Respond: a national public health Emergency Operations Center capable of activating an emergency response in <2 hours |
| Trained rapid response teams |
| Linkages between public health and law enforcement for suspected biologic attacks |
| National framework to engage international partners during a public health emergency |
Figure 2Selected programs that enhance US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) global health protection platform. This map does not include CDC international influenza, malaria, HIV/AIDS, and immunization programs.
Figure 3Country progress with independent Global Health Security Agenda and Joint External Evaluation assessments through 2018.