Introduction: 5 Years After 9/11
2006 marks the fifth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 and anthrax tragedies. Since 2001, the nation has experienced many additional threats to the public’s health, ranging from Hurricane Katrina to a life-threatening E. coli outbreak to rising concerns about a potential flu pandemic.1
America’s public health system and the healthcare delivery system are among the most important components of the nation’s preparedness against terrorism and natural disasters. They are charged with the unique responsibility of protecting the health of all citizens. Public health and healthcare professionals act as first responders, investigators, strategists, medical care providers, and advisors to public officials and decision makers. They must diagnose and contain the spread of disease, and treat individuals who are injured or may have been exposed to infectious or harmful materials.
Intentional acts of terror and naturally occurring crises have the potential to cause serious harm to large portions of the American public. Decisions and actions taken by the public health system can greatly mitigate the negative impact of these threats and help protect the health and lives of the American people. Many health emergencies can also have serious global consequences, particularly infectious threats. Germs know no boundaries, so the U.S. must also remain vigilant and support the prevention and control of health threats around the world.
ASSESSING AMERICA’S READINESS
In order to evaluate public health emergency preparedness in the states, Trust for America’s Health (TFAH) has issued an annual Ready or Not? report, beginning in 2003. Each report assesses the level of preparedness in the states, evaluates the federal government’s role and performance, and offers recommendations for improving emergency preparedness. Ready or Not? 2006 is the fourth in the series.
In 2002, Congress passed the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Act, allocating nearly $1 billion annually to states to bolster public health emergency preparedness. Even after this investment of almost $4 billion, the government health agencies have yet to release state-by-state information to Americans or policymakers about how prepared their communities are to respond to health threats.
TFAH issues this report to:
Inform the public and policymakers about where the nation’s public health system is making progress and where vulnerabilities remain;
Foster greater transparency for public health preparedness programs;
Encourage greater accountability for the spending of preparedness funds; and
Help the nation move toward a strategic, “all-hazards” system capable of responding effectively to health threats posed by diseases, disasters, and bioterrorism.
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Every winter, the U.S. suffers a seasonal flu that kills approximately 36,000 Americans and hospitalizes more than 200,000. Terrible as that is, health experts are now warning about a far more lethal kind of flu – a pandemic flu that could kill over half a million Americans, hospitalize more than two million, cost our economy billions in lost productivity and direct medical expenses, and impact virtually every community.
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The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and Trust for America’s Health (TFAH) issued a new report today, Pandemic Influenza: Warning, Children At-Risk, which finds that children and teens between the ages of 0-19 account for nearly 46 percent of all H5N1 “bird” flu cases and deaths. The report also identifies gaps in U.S. preparedness for treating and caring for children during a possible pandemic flu outbreak.
Four key areas of concern raised in the report include: child-appropriate doses of vaccine and medications; management and treatment of children who become ill; including children in strategies to slow the spread of influenza in communities; and caring for and supervising the health of children if schools and childcare facilities are closed for extended periods of time.
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Experts predict a severe pandemic flu outbreak could result in up to 1.9 million deaths in the United States, approximately 9.9 million Americans needing to be hospitalized, and an economic recession with losses of over $680 billion to the U.S. Gross Domestic Product. How to treat and care for the nation’s 73.6 million children and adolescents during an influenza pandemic is a significant concern.
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Public health planners have a new tool to help them prepare for one of the most daunting public health emergencies: an influenza pandemic. PandemicPractices.org, launched today by the Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy (CIDRAP) at the University of Minnesota and the Pew Center on the States (PCS), a division of The Pew Charitable Trusts, brings together more than 130 peer-reviewed promising practices from four countries, 22 states and 33 counties. Compiled as a resource to save communities and states time and resources, the database enables public health professionals to learn from each other and to build on their own pandemic plans.
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A pandemic flu outbreak could sicken 90 billion and kill 2 million people in the United States, according to estimates, but a recent Trust for America's Health report examines another potential casualty-- our economy. According to the report, an outbreak could deliver a $680 billion blow to the U.S. economy, leading to the second worst recession since World War II.
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