essay

You are the administrator of a department or program of a state or local health department. Describe from a food safety perspective: “3 core functions of public health and 10 basic services” and how your health department’s organizational chart applies to your planning area, and Who you will work with outside the health department to implement your plan: other public institutions, academia, trade unions, businesses, faith-based organizations, non-governmental organizations. 750 words / 6 reference

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https://www.cdc.gov/cpr/readiness/phep.htm#:~:text=The%20Public%20Health%20Emergency%20Preparedness,health%20departments%20across%20the%20nation.

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1073110519857322

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5594396/

Racial Health Disparities

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Social Determinants of Health
• Environment: Air, Land, Water, Education, Food, Housing, Jobs, Racism,

Transport, Gender Discrimination, are always interacting, operating together
• Individually and together they are more important than access to health care in

determining our health status

Racial Housing Segregation & Health

Racial Residential Segregation and Health Justice: Public Health Impacts of Housing Policies in the United States

How Racism Effects Pregnancy

https://unnaturalcauses.org/video_clips_detail.php?res_id=70

Menominee Nation

https://www.rwjf.org/en/blog/2018/04/creating-a-fair-shot-at-health.html

Racial Disparities in Health

• African Americans have higher death rates than
Whites for 12 of the 15 leading causes of death.

• Blacks and American Indians have higher age-specific
death rates than Whites from birth through the
retirement years.

• Minorities get sick sooner, have more severe illness
and die sooner than Whites

• Hispanics have higher death rates than whites for
diabetes, hypertension, liver cirrhosis & homicide

40

60

80

1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2006

L
if

e
E

xp
ec

ta
nc

y
White
Black

Life Expectancy Lags, 1950-2006

Murphy, NVSS 2000; Braveman et al. in Press, NLMS 1988-1998

63.6

70.6

60.8

69.1

74.4
76.1

69.168.2

71.7

64.1

71.4
73.2

78.277.6

SAT Scores by Income

Source: (ETS) Mantsios; N=898,596

Family Income Median Score
More than $100,000 1129
$80,000 to $100,000 1085
$70,000 to $80,000 1064
$60,000 to $70,000 1049
$50,000 to $60,000 1034
$40,000 to $50,000 1016
$30,000 to $40,000 992
$20,000 to $30,000 964
$10,000 to $20,000 920
Less than $10,000 873

Percent of Job Applicants Receiving a Callback

Criminal
Record White Black

No 34% 14%

Yes 17% 5%

Source: Devan Pager; NYT March 20, 2004

Segregation and Housing Quality

Crowding

Sub-standard housing

Noise levels

Environmental hazards (lead, pollutants, allergens)

Ability to regulate temperature

Segregation and Neighborhood Quality

Municipal services (transportation, police, fire, garbage)

Purchasing power of income (poorer quality, higher prices).

Access to Medical Care (primary care, hospitals, pharmacies)

Personal and property crime

Environmental toxins

Abandoned buildings, commercial and industrial facilities

1

2

1

5

Years of Public Health
Emergency

Preparedness

15

ears of Public Health Emergency Preparedness

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LUNXkFzAWk&ab_channel=CentersforDiseaseControlandPrevention%

28

CDC%2

9

Strategic National Stockpile

3

Public Health Emergency Risk Reduction

Mitigation

• Adaptation
• Preparedness
• Response
• Recovery

4

What then is disaster risk?

Risk =
[Hazard x Vulnerability] – [Capacity]

doou, flickr

5

Public Health Disaster Planning for Districts

Vulnerability to Pandemics &
Climate Change Disasters

• 95% of disaster deaths occur among

6

6%
of the poorest countries1

• From

19

65-

20

00 > 90% of all disaster
victims lived in Africa, Asia &
Latin America

6

WHO:

An emergency is when normal
procedures are interrupted, and

immediate measures (management)
need to be taken to prevent it from
becoming a disaster, which is even

harder to recover from

7

Public Health Disaster Planning for Districts 9

An evolution in approach

• From Response and
Relief

• To Risk Reduction

Sanofi Pasteur, flickr

Church Mission Society (CMS), flickr

9

Risk Reduction=Prevention
Recognition or identification of risks[1]

Ranking or evaluation of risks[2]

Responding to significant risks
Tolerating
Treating
Transferring
Terminating
Resourcing controls and planning
Reaction planning
Reporting and monitoring risk performance
Reviewing the risk management framework

10

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_management

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_management

Communities, Workers, Students
• Positive Asset Based Where People Are
• Collective, Cooperative Risk Assessment
• Prepare Resources with Communities,

Workers, Students & their organizations
• Reduce/Eliminate the causative

agents/environment
• Reduce Transmission
• PPE
• Testing
• Complete Access to Treatment

11

Exposure/Hazards:
Chemicals in Air, Food, Land, Water, Workplace
Biological Pathogens
Emotional Exposures
Exposure Sources
Exposure Routes
Exposure Protection

12

Emergency Action Plan

Communication: In-Person, Phone, IT
Hazard Monitoring/Surveillance
Hazard Control
Training
Mobilize
First Aid
Evacuation
Safe Areas

13

Mitigation

Eliminate or reduce the impacts and risks of
hazards through proactive measures taken
before an emergency or disaster occurs

14

Preparedness

Focuses on preparing/organizing people,
equipment and procedures for use when
a disaster occurs. The equipment and
procedures can be used to reduce
vulnerability to disaster, to mitigate the
impacts of a disaster, or to respond more
efficiently in an emergency.

15

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disaster

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency

Local Emergency Planning Committees

(LEPCs) are required by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency under
the Emergency Planning and Community
Right-to-Know Act to develop an emergency
response plan, review the plan at least
annually, and provide information about
chemicals in the community to local residents

16

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Environmental_Protection_Agency

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Planning_and_Community_Right-to-Know_Act

17

•Identification of facilities and transportation routes of
extremely hazardous substances
•Description of emergency response procedures, on
and off site
•Designation of a community coordinator and facility
emergency coordinator(s) to implement the plan
•Outline of emergency notification procedures
•Description of how to determine the probable affected
area and population by releases

18

•Description of local emergency equipment and
facilities and the persons responsible for them
•Outline of evacuation plans
•A training program for emergency responders
(including schedules)
•Methods and schedules for exercising emergency
response plans

What is Disaster Risk Reduction?
• The conceptual framework of elements with

possibilities to minimize:
– Hazards
– Vulnerabilities
– and therefore disaster risks to:
• Avoid (prevent) or
• Limit (mitigate and prepare for)

the adverse impacts of hazards within the broad
context of sustainable development

19

Risk Reduction versus

Risk Management

• Risk Management
– Prevention
– Mitigation
– Preparedness
– Response
– Recovery

• Risk Reduction
– Prevention
– Mitigation
– Preparedness

Risk Reduction is:

•Pre-disaster

•Pre-emptive

•Part of development

20

The Risk Reduction Cycle

Hazard
Analysis

Risk Reduction:
•Hazard mitigation

•Vulnerability reduction

Sustainable
development

Source unknown
21

Approach to risk reduction

Source unknown
22

What is Preparedness?
• Pre-disaster actions that result

in persons knowing what to do
and how to respond when
disaster has occurs
– It is long-term
– Part of a larger risk reduction

program
– Comprehensive application of

sustainable development
– All-hazard
– Multi-sectoral
– Culturally sensitive and specific

VC4Africa, flickr

23

Public Health Disaster Planning for Districts

Objectives of Public Health
Emergency Preparedness

• Prevent morbidity and mortality
• Provide care for casualties
• Manage adverse climatic and environment

conditions
• Ensure restoration of normal health
• Re-establish health services
• Protect staff
• Protect public health and medicinal assets

24

Keim’s
11 E’s of Emergency Preparedness (Mark Keim, CDC)

• Economic incentive
• Epidemiology
• Enforcement of codes
• Emergency plans
• Equipment stockpiling
• Education
• Exercise and drills
• Early warning
• Evacuation
• Evaluation
• Electronics (communication)

tj.blackwell, flickr 25

Risk management

• What is risk?
– The probability of suffering damage (to life,

property, economic disruptions and environment)
from a hazard for a given area and reference
period. Risk is the product of hazard and
vulnerability

26

Disaster Risk management

• Definition: It is defined as the process of
identifying, analyzing and quantifying the
probability of losses in order to undertake
preventive or corrective actions

• This involves two types of activities ;
– Planning actions to reduce vulnerability in areas

where risk can be controlled, and
– Establishing protective mechanisms against the

potential economic losses from uncontrollable
factors of natural hazards

27

Risk Management

• It entails efforts and measures put in place to
reduce risk in case of a disaster happening

• This is what is generally termed as disaster risk
reduction

• It is also about commitments related to
disaster and vulnerability reduction and
improved early warning

28

Risk management continues
• Since little can be done to prevent occurrence of

most natural hazards, actions and activities
should focus on reducing existing and future
vulnerabilities to damage and loss

• There are three primary and interrelated
categories in risk management:
• risk identification
• risk reduction
• risk transfer

• These measures are mostly related to pre-
disaster phases of disaster risk management and
reflect the new approach in DRR

29

Risk Mgt Cont…

• The pre-disaster phase of disaster risk management involves
four distinct but interrelated components.
• Risk identification,
• risk reduction/mitigation,
• risk transfer and
• preparedness.

It is a thorough analysis of existing vulnerabilities, location,
severity & intensity of threat

30

Risk identification
• The following activities help to identify and

understand natural hazard risk:
– Hazard data collection and mapping (frequency, magnitude

and location) ,
– vulnerability assessment (population and assets exposed),
– risk assessment (probability of expected losses)

31

Risk reduction or
Prevention/Mitigation:

• These are measures taken to eliminate or reduce the intensity
of a hazardous event.

• These measures address existing vulnerabilities through
measures like early warning
• Include actions such as:

• Implementation and enforcement of building standards
• Environmental protection measures
• Resource management practices
• Mention others?

• can be taken to reduce future vulnerability

32

Even with risk reduction,
preparedness is important

• Even when effective disaster reduction
measures are in place, there would often be
an element of risk that is residual or cannot
be managed because it is either too costly or
technically unfeasible to eliminate

• Preparedness is an important component of
DRR which deals with residual and
unmanaged risk

33

The Hyogo frame work on risk
Reduction

• The Hyogo Framework for Action, assists the
efforts of nations and communities to become
more resilient to and cope better with the
hazards they face.

• Although the primary responsibility for its
implementation rests with governments,
collaboration and cooperation between all
stakeholders in managing the risk is crucial

34

Hyogo frame work: Recommended
Actions

The Hyogo Framework for Action, commits governments as
well as regional, International and NGOs to;

• Ensure that disaster risk reduction is a national and local
priority

• Identify, assess and monitor disaster risks and enhance
early warning;

• Use knowledge, innovation and education to build a culture
of safety and resilience at all levels

• Reduce the underlying risk factors, and
• Strengthen disaster preparedness for effective response at

all levels ( Community, Sub county, District, Regional and
national levels

35

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