PHEP Resources to Strengthen Response Readiness

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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention PHEP Resources to Strengthen Response Readiness Christine Kosmos, R.N., B.S.N., M.S. Director, Division of State and Local Readiness (DSLR) Todd Talbert, M.A. Senior Advisor, Office of Program Coordination, DSLR David Hunter, M.P.H., M.S.W. Chief, Capacity Building Branch, DSLR Kevin Griffy, B.S., M.P.H. Director, Preparedness Field Assignee Program, DSLR 13 th Annual DPHP Meeting October 25, 2017

PHEP Program Resources 2

Updating the Public Health Emergency Preparedness Capability Standards 3

Public Health Preparedness Capabilities: Revisiting the Premise What the capabilities are National standards for public health emergency preparedness and response What they are NOT NOT specific NOFO guidance Road map, direction-setting framework NOT a destination or end point Recommendation of what to do NOT how to do it in every instance Considerations to help jurisdictions coordinate their ESF-8 role Includes content that may relate to measurement NOT necessarily prescriptive NOT performance measures 4

Overview of Capability Refinement Since the 2011 release of the Public Health Preparedness Capabilities: National Standards for State and Local Planning, public health emergency management programs have evolved. Lessons Learned Public health promising practices; technology; new threats; updated science; Ebola, Zika, hurricanes, and other responses Operational Readiness Evolving Priorities Public health systems continue to plan with a greater emphasis on operational demonstration Alignment with National Preparedness Goal, healthcare preparedness and response capabilities, national strategies/priorities (e.g., National Health Security Preparedness Index, Public Health Accreditation Board) and other public health initiatives Desired outcome: Updated capability standards that account for state and local input, current public health practice, operational readiness, and other public health emergency preparedness and response priorities 5

Capability Revisions Overview No Changes in Structure The 15 capabilities will be retained, and tier 1 will remain tier 1. Edits are primarily focused on tasks and resource elements but also include some changes to functions and a potential title change for Capability 8. Capability 1. Community Preparedness Capability 2. Community Recovery Capability 3. Emergency Operations Coordination Capability 4. Emergency Public and Information Warning Capability 5. Fatality Management Capability 6. Information Sharing Capability 7. Mass Care Capability 8. Medical Countermeasure Dispensing and Administration Capability 9. Medical Materiel Management and Distribution Capability 10. Medical Surge Capability 11. Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions Capability 12. Public Health Laboratory Testing Capability 13. PH Surveillance and Epi Investigation Capability 14. Responder Safety and Health Capability 15. Volunteer Management Tier 1 Capabilities 6

Capability Revisions Overview Focus of Capability Refinements Update Executive Summary to describe purpose and operational use of the capabilities (logic model) Simplify and streamline language without loss of meaning - Replace passive tense with active tense - Change written plans should to more descriptive terms - Maintain concepts related to have and have access to Update with current guidance, standards, and suggested resources Improve cross-cutting and intersecting program areas such as environmental health, vulnerable populations, tribal populations, and pandemic influenza Update resource elements and tasks, as needed New language in some instances 7

Capability Refinement Initiative Inputs Identified need to refine the capabilities: Assessment of Public Health Preparedness Capabilities Report PHEP Program Review 2017 NACCHO Preparedness Summit Feedback Staff Survey (internal staff feedback) Three-Phase Refinement Approach DSLR is engaging internal and external SMEs to collect feedback and refine the capabilities. Phase 1: Subject Matter Experts Input and Draft Development Collected SME input from cross-functional work groups to inform capability refinements Adjudicated SME input and developed initial drafts through several iterations with SMEs Phase 2: Draft Review and Vetting Completed: Reviewed with CDC SMEs Distributed drafts to partners Ongoing: Finalizing capabilities based on incoming partner feedback Phase 3: Clearance & Finalization Submit to CDC clearance Design and publish final document Disseminate capabilities and facilitate program integration Complete In Progress Coming Up 8

Development and Review CDC and Federal SME Collaboration Input from 150+ SMEs 15 capability work groups Cross-cutting work groups: Environmental health Pandemic influenza Tribal populations Vulnerable populations External Partner Coordination CIO ATSDR CDC OD/OMHHE CGH NIOSH OID NCEZID NCHHSTP NCIRD Work Group Participants CIO ONDIEH OD NCBDDD NCCDPHP NCEH NCIPC OPHPR OD DEO DSLR DSNS CIO / Agency OPHSS CSELS NCHS OSSAM OSTLTS HHS/ASPR DHS/FEMA Select national partner organizations are soliciting additional feedback from state and local representatives Participating Partners Organization Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO) National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO) Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) Association of Public Health Laboratories (APHL) National Emergency Management Association (NEMA) 9

Example of Refined Capability: Substantive Change Capability 3: Emergency Operations Coordination The current and revised language below provide an example of major revisions made in DSLR s internal review process. Current Language Task 2: At the time of an incident and as applicable during an incident, determine whether public health has a lead role, a supporting role, or no role. These roles are defined as follows: Lead role: public health has primary responsibility to establish event or incident objectives and response strategies and to task other supporting agencies (e.g., outbreaks of measles, seasonal influenza) Supporting role: public health may be tasked by lead agency (e.g., oil spills, earthquakes, wild fires, hurricanes) No role: there is no public health implication Revised Language Task 2: Determine the public health preparedness and response role: Identify if public health will have a primary response role, a supporting role, or no role as based on projected incident impacts. 10

Example of Refined Capability: Substantive Change Capability 8: Medical Countermeasures Dispensing and Administration The Capability 8 title was updated to account for vaccine administration. The current and revised language below provide an example of how this change was implemented throughout the capability. Current Language Task 2: Request additional medical countermeasures from private, jurisdictional, and/or federal partners using established procedures, according to incident needs. Task 3: Identify and notify any intermediary distribution sites based on the needs of the incident, if applicable. Revised Language Task 2: Request or obtain medical countermeasures: Establish procedures for dispensing or administration sites to request and obtain additional medical countermeasures from jurisdictional, federal, and/or other partners. Task 3: Receive medical countermeasures: Ensure ability of all participating dispensing and administration sites to receive medical countermeasures according to logistics, infrastructure, and security protocols. 11

Example of Refined Capability: Dynamic Change Capability 6: Information Sharing The current and revised language below provide an example of revisions made to update the capabilities with more evergreen language. Current Language E1: Have or have access to electronic systems capable of handling routine day-to-day information data transmission as well as emergency notification and situational awareness. When conveying personal health information or syndromic surveillance information the system should meet the following standards: 91 Applicable patient privacy-related laws and standards, including state or territorial laws, and Health Insurance Portability and Accountability, Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health, National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the Office of the National Coordinator standards such as: Federal standards and specifications, (e.g. messaging guides) when applicable 92 (For additional or supporting detail, see Capability 13: Public Health Surveillance and Epidemiological Investigation) (Continued) Revised Language E/T1: Electronic systems capable of handling routine day-to-day information data transmission as well as emergency notification and situational awareness, meeting the following standards: 91 Applicable patient privacy-related laws and standards, such as: Encrypted data during transit according to jurisdictional and, if available, national standards 93,94 (Continued) 12

On-TRAC Upgrades: Improving Access to Technical Assistance and Resources 13

On-TRAC Homepage 14

Assistance Center Page 15

Roadside AssisTAnce Page 16

On-TRAC Search Page 17

Search Page Search Everything in On-Trac 18

Search Page Focused Search Categories Search a Site CDC Provided o o Resource Center Assistance Center Peer Provided o Regional Workspace 19

Search Page Focused Search Categories Search Specific Library CDC Provided Resource Library Training Opportunities FAQ Peer Provided Peer 2 Peer 20

Additional On-TRAC Advantages Users maintain communications with PHEP specialists Peer 2 Peer exchange platforms maintained Usage reports will be generated Characterize TA requests Identify TA gaps Develop data-driven improvements Flexible and allows for continuous improvements, based on user feedback 21

Field Staff Resources 22

Career Epidemiology Field Officer (CEFO) Program Created in 2002 in response to events of 9/11/2001 Mission strengthen nationwide epidemiologic capacity for public health preparedness and response CEFO Mid-level to senior CDC epidemiologist assigned a health department Funded through CDC s Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) Cooperative Agreement Can serve as a state, territorial, local, or nationwide emergency response asset 23

CEFO Activities Strengthening state and local surveillance systems Conducting outbreak investigations and response Developing response plans for public health emergencies Building partnerships for emergency preparedness Serving as liaisons to response teams Leading portions of state s planning and response activities for pandemic influenza Leading or participating in emergency response exercises Providing expertise on the design, implementation, and analysis of epidemiologic studies 24

Career Epidemiology Field Officers Assignment Locations July 2017 Carter O Leary Holzbauer Mody Elbadawi Toews (Chicago) McFadden Harper Quinn Vora Styles (NYC) Burks Thomas Wilken Chai Buss Navon Kurkjian Campagnolo Miller Goodell Sunenshine Venkat Edison Thomasson Fleischauer MacFarquhar Thoroughman Porter Hancock (USAPI) 36 CEFOs are assigned to 30 jurisdictions Randolph Daley Brant Goode Eddie Weiss Hugh Mainzer Victor Caceres Roth (USVI)

PFA Program Overview PFA Program was formed in January 2014 PFAs are funded by DSLR PFAs are graduates of the CDC Public Health Associate Program (PHAP) Initially a three-year term-limited program Increased level of responsibility each year PFAs support state and local capacity while gaining valuable knowledge, skills, and experience to bring back to CDC in the future 26

PFA Assignee Host Site Locations A total of 25 PFAs in 17 states and three large metropolitan areas Hired four new PFAs that began with DSLR in October 2017 In July 2017, transitioned DSLR field staff to PFA Program Of new PFAs: Placed assignees in two new PHEP jurisdictions (Alabama and Georgia) Filled three vacant positions in Arizona, Minnesota, and Pennsylvania 27

28

Principal Capabilities Addressed in PFA-Reported Activities, January June 2017 (N=225) 29

PFA-supported local responses and planned events, 2017 Barack Obama s Presidential Farewell Address Taste of Chicago (Chicago, IL) Avalanches, landslides, and flooding associated with heavy snowfall (Boise, ID) Northern California Wildfires (CA) CalMAT Earthquake Exercise (CA) Natural Disaster Planned Events Natural Disaster Disease Outbreaks Planned Events Bio/ Chem/ WMD NCAA Final Four Music Festival Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station Full Scale Exercise Zika Response Opioid Epidemic (Phoenix, AZ) Planned Events Disease Outbreaks Disease Outbreaks PFA support for Zika Response and SCTF (Atlanta, GA) Tropical Storm Sandy Mumps outbreak response at LSU (Baton Rouge, LA) Planned Events Planned Events Drive Thru POD Exercise (Hartford, CT) Presidential Inauguration Women s March on Washington 2017 Presidential Address to Congress (Washington, DC) 30

Host Site Impact Evaluation Preliminary Results Conducted in February 2017 Surveyed a representative sample of PFA host agencies Received 100% response rate Both qualitative and quantitative data Assess the value, skills, and contributions of PFAs to host agencies 31

Host Site Impact Evaluation Preliminary Results (Cont.) Key Themes PFAs fill state-level personnel/programmatic gaps PFAs play a critical role within state health departments their absence would impact the state s ability to adequately address public health preparedness capabilities Mutually beneficial for both PFA and host site supervisors PFA Program expansion is encouraged and necessary to better support state agencies 32

Thank you! For more information, contact CDC 1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636) TTY: 1-888-232-6348 www.cdc.gov The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.