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Post-disaster Surveillance among State Health Departments in the United States

Description

The role of public health in preparing for, responding to, and recovering from emergencies has expanded as a result of the massive impact recent disasters have had on affected populations. Nearly every large-scale disaster carries substantial public health risk and requires a response that addresses immediate effects of the disaster on a population (e.g., mass casualties and severe injuries, lack of shelter in severe weather), as well as subsequent secondary physical effects (e.g., carbon monoxide poisoning due to improper operation or location of carbon monoxide-producing devices such as generators) and emotional effects (e.g., grief, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder) caused by the disaster. Disaster epidemiology has been identified as an evolving field that integrates a variety of data sources and technological and geospatial resources to expedite reporting and to increase the accuracy of information collected and used by emergency planners and incident managers. As the national organization that supports the activities of applied epidemiologists in state, tribal, local, territorial, and federal public health agencies, the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) assembled a Disaster Epidemiology Subcommittee of public health experts and practitioners from diverse fields of applied epidemiology to discuss the use of epidemiologic methods in all phases of the disaster management cycle. In 2012, the Subcommittee assessed state-level disaster epidemiology capacity with a focus on surveillance. 

Objective

The panel will discuss the current status of disaster surveillance capabilities at local and state health departments in the United States and will provide an overview of current resources available to epidemiologists for surveillance.

Submitted by elamb on