Ready or Not, Patients Will Present: Improving Urban Pandemic Preparedness.
Syra MadadJoshua B MoskovitzMatthew R BoyceNicholas V CagliusoRebecca KatzPublished in: Disaster medicine and public health preparedness (2020)
Over the past century, society has achieved great gains in medicine, public health, and health-care infrastructure, particularly in the areas of vaccines, antibiotics, sanitation, intensive care and medical technology. Still, despite these developments, infectious diseases are emerging at unprecedented rates around the globe. Large urban centers are particularly vulnerable to communicable disease events, and must have well-prepared response systems, including on the front-line level. In November 2018, the United States' largest municipal health-care delivery system, New York City Health + Hospitals, hosted a half-day executive-level pandemic response workshop, which sought to illustrate the complexity of preparing for, responding to, and recovering from modern-day infectious diseases impacting urban environments. Attendees were subjected to a condensed, plausible, pandemic influenza scenario and asked to simulate the high-level strategic decisions made by leaders by internal (eg, Chief Medical Officer, Chief Nursing Officer, and Legal Affairs) and external (eg, city, state, and federal public health and emergency management entities) partners across an integrated system of acute, postacute, and ambulatory sites, challenging players to question their assumptions about managing the consequences of a highly pathogenic pandemic.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- infectious diseases
- public health
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- global health
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- emergency department
- health information
- mental health
- wastewater treatment
- drinking water
- patient reported outcomes
- drug induced
- hepatitis c virus
- hiv infected
- risk assessment
- respiratory failure
- hiv testing
- mechanical ventilation
- sewage sludge