"Report Advises Health
Systems on Disaster Response", (c) Mark Moran, Psychiatric News,
August 2007
The AMA/APHA Linkages Leadership Summit project is funded under
a cooperative agreement with the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
Better funding and integration of emergency and trauma services,
improved and sustained training of physicians and other emergency
health care workers, and enhanced legal protection of first
responders to a disaster are the broad goals issued by an
18-member coalition of health care and medical organizations
in a 54-page report titled "Improving Health System
Preparedness for Terrorism and Mass-Casualty Events."
The coalition was led by the AMA and the American Public Health
Association (APHA). The report, issued last month, includes
53 strategic recommendations for legislators, government
officials, and organizational leaders to prepare for and
respond to catastrophic emergencies more effectively.
The goal of the recommendations is to strengthen health system
preparedness and response through increased funding, greater
integration, continued education and training, and legal
protections for responders.
"Most disasters are unplanned, but the response shouldn't be," said
AMA President Ronald Davis, M.D., in a statement following release
of the report. "Whether disasters are natural or man-made,
infectious-disease pandemics or terrorist attacks,
physicians, health care professionals, and public health
workers must be prepared to respond to emergencies and aid in
the recovery efforts that follow. We can't predict when a
disaster will strike, but as first responders, we can better
prepare ourselves and others to protect the health and safety
of our patients and citizens."
The AMA and APHA convened the AMA/APHA Linkages Leadership Summit,
which met in 2005 in Chicago and 2006 in New Orleans, to develop
recommendations that promote a coordinated national agenda for
strengthening health-system preparedness for terrorism and other
disasters. The call to action stresses the following critical
recommendations:
 | Public health systems must be appropriately funded to respond
adequately to day-to-day emergencies and catastrophic
mass-casualty events.
|
 | Public health and disaster response systems must be
fully integrated and interoperable at all government
levels.
|
 | Health care and public health professionals should maintain
an appropriate level of education and training.
|
 | Health care and public health responders must be
provided with and assured of adequate legal
protections when they respond to a disaster.
|
"For too long, public health and medicine have responded to
emergencies in separate silos," said Georges Benjamin, M.D.,
executive director of the APHA, in a statement. The report
"represents our attempt to bridge the gap so that our health
care and public health systems are fully integrated and
interoperable in ways that allow for a rapid and efficient
disaster response."
The AMA/APHA Linkages Leadership Summit project was funded under
a cooperative agreement from the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention's Terrorism Injuries: Information Dissemination
and Exchange program.
The following organizations are members of the AMA/APHA Linkages
Leadership Summit: American Academy of Pediatrics, American
College of Emergency Physicians, American College of Surgeons,
American Dental Association, American Hospital Association,
American Nurses Association, American Osteopathic Association,
American Trauma Society, Association of State and Territorial
Health Officials, Emergency Nurses Association, National
Association of County and City Health Officials, National
Association of EMS Physicians, National Association of
Emergency Medical Technicians, National Association of State
EMS Officials, National Native American EMS Association, and
State and Territorial Injury Prevention Directors
Association.