Public health response systems in-action: learning from local health departments' experiences with acute and emergency incidents.

As part of their core mission, public health agencies attend to a wide range of disease and health threats, including those that require routine, acute, and emergency responses. While each incident is unique, the number and type of response activities are finite; therefore, through comparative analy...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jennifer C Hunter, Jane E Yang, Adam W Crawley, Laura Biesiadecki, Tomás J Aragón
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24236137/pdf/?tool=EBI
_version_ 1818459708897361920
author Jennifer C Hunter
Jane E Yang
Adam W Crawley
Laura Biesiadecki
Tomás J Aragón
author_facet Jennifer C Hunter
Jane E Yang
Adam W Crawley
Laura Biesiadecki
Tomás J Aragón
author_sort Jennifer C Hunter
collection DOAJ
description As part of their core mission, public health agencies attend to a wide range of disease and health threats, including those that require routine, acute, and emergency responses. While each incident is unique, the number and type of response activities are finite; therefore, through comparative analysis, we can learn about commonalities in the response patterns that could improve predictions and expectations regarding the resources and capabilities required to respond to future acute events. In this study, we interviewed representatives from more than 120 local health departments regarding their recent experiences with real-world acute public health incidents, such as infectious disease outbreaks, severe weather events, chemical spills, and bioterrorism threats. We collected highly structured data on key aspects of the incident and the public health response, particularly focusing on the public health activities initiated and community partners engaged in the response efforts. As a result, we are able to make comparisons across event types, create response profiles, and identify functional and structural response patterns that have import for future public health preparedness and response. Our study contributes to clarifying the complexity of public health response systems and our analysis reveals the ways in which these systems are adaptive to the character of the threat, resulting in differential activation of functions and partners based on the type of incident. Continued and rigorous examination of the experiences of health departments throughout the nation will refine our very understanding of what the public health response system is, will enable the identification of organizational and event inputs to performance, and will allow for the construction of rich, relevant, and practical models of response operations that can be employed to strengthen public health systems.
first_indexed 2024-12-14T23:18:39Z
format Article
id doaj.art-ae2d163c2b22452fae796e647c056dfa
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-14T23:18:39Z
publishDate 2013-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-ae2d163c2b22452fae796e647c056dfa2022-12-21T22:44:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01811e7945710.1371/journal.pone.0079457Public health response systems in-action: learning from local health departments' experiences with acute and emergency incidents.Jennifer C HunterJane E YangAdam W CrawleyLaura BiesiadeckiTomás J AragónAs part of their core mission, public health agencies attend to a wide range of disease and health threats, including those that require routine, acute, and emergency responses. While each incident is unique, the number and type of response activities are finite; therefore, through comparative analysis, we can learn about commonalities in the response patterns that could improve predictions and expectations regarding the resources and capabilities required to respond to future acute events. In this study, we interviewed representatives from more than 120 local health departments regarding their recent experiences with real-world acute public health incidents, such as infectious disease outbreaks, severe weather events, chemical spills, and bioterrorism threats. We collected highly structured data on key aspects of the incident and the public health response, particularly focusing on the public health activities initiated and community partners engaged in the response efforts. As a result, we are able to make comparisons across event types, create response profiles, and identify functional and structural response patterns that have import for future public health preparedness and response. Our study contributes to clarifying the complexity of public health response systems and our analysis reveals the ways in which these systems are adaptive to the character of the threat, resulting in differential activation of functions and partners based on the type of incident. Continued and rigorous examination of the experiences of health departments throughout the nation will refine our very understanding of what the public health response system is, will enable the identification of organizational and event inputs to performance, and will allow for the construction of rich, relevant, and practical models of response operations that can be employed to strengthen public health systems.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24236137/pdf/?tool=EBI
spellingShingle Jennifer C Hunter
Jane E Yang
Adam W Crawley
Laura Biesiadecki
Tomás J Aragón
Public health response systems in-action: learning from local health departments' experiences with acute and emergency incidents.
PLoS ONE
title Public health response systems in-action: learning from local health departments' experiences with acute and emergency incidents.
title_full Public health response systems in-action: learning from local health departments' experiences with acute and emergency incidents.
title_fullStr Public health response systems in-action: learning from local health departments' experiences with acute and emergency incidents.
title_full_unstemmed Public health response systems in-action: learning from local health departments' experiences with acute and emergency incidents.
title_short Public health response systems in-action: learning from local health departments' experiences with acute and emergency incidents.
title_sort public health response systems in action learning from local health departments experiences with acute and emergency incidents
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24236137/pdf/?tool=EBI
work_keys_str_mv AT jenniferchunter publichealthresponsesystemsinactionlearningfromlocalhealthdepartmentsexperienceswithacuteandemergencyincidents
AT janeeyang publichealthresponsesystemsinactionlearningfromlocalhealthdepartmentsexperienceswithacuteandemergencyincidents
AT adamwcrawley publichealthresponsesystemsinactionlearningfromlocalhealthdepartmentsexperienceswithacuteandemergencyincidents
AT laurabiesiadecki publichealthresponsesystemsinactionlearningfromlocalhealthdepartmentsexperienceswithacuteandemergencyincidents
AT tomasjaragon publichealthresponsesystemsinactionlearningfromlocalhealthdepartmentsexperienceswithacuteandemergencyincidents