Partnership Between a Federal Agency and 4 Tribal Nations to Improve COVID-19 Response Capacities.

Autor: Kaur, Harpriya, Welch, Seh, Bhairavabhotla, Ravikiran, Weidle, Paul J., Santibanez, Scott, Haberling, Dana L., Smith, Eva M., Ferris-George, Wendy, Hayashi, Konrad, Hostler, Allie, Ao, Trong, Dieke, Ada, Boyer, Devon, King, Eric, Teton, Randy'L, Williams-Singleton, Nickie, Flying, Eva M., Hladik, Wolfgang, Marshall, Khiya J., Pourier, Delores
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Zdroj: Public Health Reports; Sep/Oct2022, Vol. 137 Issue 5, p820-825, 6p
Abstrakt: Upon request from tribal nations, and as part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC's) emergency response, CDC staff provided both remote and on-site assistance to tribes to plan, prepare, and respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. From April 2, 2020, through June 11, 2021, CDC deployed a total of 275 staff to assist 29 tribal nations. CDC staff typically collaborated in multiple work areas including epidemiology and surveillance (86%), contact tracing (76%), infection prevention control (72%), community mitigation (72%), health communication (66%), incident command structure (55%), emergency preparedness (38%), and worker safety (31%). We describe the activities of CDC staff in collaboration with 4 tribal nations, Northern Cheyenne, Hoopa Valley, Shoshone-Bannock, and Oglala Sioux Tribe, to combat COVID-19 and lessons learned from the engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index