| Literature DB >> 29155672 |
Tasha Stehling-Ariza, Adrienne Lefevre, Dinorah Calles, Kpandja Djawe, Richard Garfield, Michael Gerber, Margherita Ghiselli, Coralie Giese, Ashley L Greiner, Adela Hoffman, Leigh Ann Miller, Lisa Moorhouse, Carlos Navarro-Colorado, James Walsh, Dante Bugli, Cyrus Shahpar.
Abstract
The 2014-2016 Ebola virus disease epidemic in West Africa highlighted challenges faced by the global response to a large public health emergency. Consequently, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention established the Global Rapid Response Team (GRRT) to strengthen emergency response capacity to global health threats, thereby ensuring global health security. Dedicated GRRT staff can be rapidly mobilized for extended missions, improving partner coordination and the continuity of response operations. A large, agencywide roster of surge staff enables rapid mobilization of qualified responders with wide-ranging experience and expertise. Team members are offered emergency response training, technical training, foreign language training, and responder readiness support. Recent response missions illustrate the breadth of support the team provides. GRRT serves as a model for other countries and is committed to strengthening emergency response capacity to respond to outbreaks and emergencies worldwide, thereby enhancing global health security.Entities:
Keywords: CDC; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Ebola; Global Rapid Response Team; disaster; emergency response; epidemiology; global health security; outbreak; public health; rapid response; viruses
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29155672 PMCID: PMC5711298 DOI: 10.3201/eid2313.170711
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Challenges encountered during response to the 2014–2016 Ebola epidemic in West Africa and GRRT mitigation strategies
| Challenge | GRRT strategy |
|---|---|
| Limited in-country capacity to detect and respond to disease outbreaks ( | Support the development of national outbreak detection and response systems |
| Wide range of technical expertise required to address needs of a large outbreak response ( | Recruit team members with a wide range of technical expertise and experience |
|
| Train responders in multiple technical areas for high-risk diseases |
| Establishing working partnerships with governments and partner organizations for more efficient coordination ( | Train responders on working with partner organizations, incident management systems, cultural sensitivity, and foreign languages |
|
| Recruit dedicated, ready responders who can mobilize for up to 6 mo for stronger partner relationships and improved coordination |
| Short mobilizations (traditionally 30 d) and frequent rotation of staff disrupted continuity of response activities ( | Recruit dedicated responders who are available and ready to mobilize for up to 6 mo if needed |
| Expand the typical mobilization length of those in leadership roles | |
|
| Develop best practices and systems for information management in field response |
| Responder preparation and readiness ( | Strengthen safety, security, and responder wellness training through a GRRT orientation |
| Support continuous learning by offering frequent technical trainings on priority topics | |
| Track responder international travel–related mobilization requirements, training, and clearance compliance | |
|
| Obtain supervisor preapproval for mobilizations during on-call months |
| Identifying appropriate responders ( | Roster GRRT responders and tracking skills and experience to match staffing needs |
| Limited foreign language capacity ( | Develop a program to develop and validate foreign language capacity |
| Logistical support for field efforts ( | Roster a group of dedicated and surge logisticians who can mobilize to provide support directly to responders in the field or coordinate with Atlanta-based logistics personnel to provide support |
*GRRT, Global Rapid Response Team.
FigureGlobal Rapid Response Team personnel mobilizations, September 2015–December 2016.