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Inoculating Cities. Case Studies of Urban Pandemic Preparedness

  • Book

  • June 2021
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5275265

Inoculating Cities: Case Studies of Urban Pandemic Preparedness begins with a brief historical description of infectious disease outbreaks in cities as well as an overview of infectious disease outbreaks since 2000 that hold profound implications for cities and urban environments - such as severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2003, H1N1 influenza in 2009, Ebola virus in 2014, Zika virus in 2015, and more recently, COVID-19 in 2020. Each of these outbreaks affected different geographies of the world and underscored the importance of urban pandemic preparedness or urban health security as a means of mitigating the threats posed by infectious diseases. This book describes several of the characteristics of cities that make them uniquely vulnerable to infectious disease threats which include, but are not limited to, their population density, population diversity, internal and external population movements, and inequalities in cities. Finally, the book discusses frameworks and capacities that are essential for preparing cities to prevent, detect, and respond to infectious disease outbreaks. With contributions from experts and researchers with first-hand experiences with infectious disease outbreaks, their impact on the management of disease, and pandemic preparedness in progressively urban societies, Inoculating Cities addresses the unique threats infectious diseases pose to urban environments and surveys innovative models that cities are using to combat these threats.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Controlling Dengue, an Urban Pandemic a case study of Delhi, India 3. The 2019 Measles outbreak in Clark County, Washington 4. Municipal Healthcare Delivery Special Pathogens Preparedness and Response in the City that Never Sleeps: The NYC Health + Hospitals' Approach to the 2018-2019 Measles Outbreak and Other Infectious Disease Threats 5. The Cleveland Ebola Incident Response 6. Preparedness planning for re-emergent smallpox in differing high income cities Phoenix, USA and Sydney, Australia 7. Assessing city-level capacity for urban epidemic preparedness and response 8. Developing a more effective locally led response to the HIV epidemic in Blantyre, Malawi 9. Building robust interface between public health authority and medical institutions in a densely populated city: State-of-the-art integrated pandemic and emerging disease preparedness in the Greater Tokyo Area in Japan 10. The translational flow of data: Using science, technology, and data analytics to combat the spread of disease between and within cities 11. After Action Reviews as a Best Practice Tool for Evaluating the Response to Urban Disease Outbreaks in Nigeria 12. Development of Emergency Operation Centers in Myanmar 13. Preparedness through Simulation: Urban Outbreak 2019 14. The Role of Private Sector in Urban Health Security 15. Conclusion

Authors

Rebecca Katz PhD, MPH, Professor and Director, Center for Global Health Science and Security, Georgetown University, United States. Dr. Rebecca Katz is a professor and the director of the Center for Global Health Science and Security at Georgetown University. She has more than two decades of public health research experience, much of which has focused on global health security, public health preparedness, and health diplomacy. She has written on the urban governance of disease, the flow of infectious disease risk into and between urban areas and worked with municipal authorities throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Matthew Boyce MS, Senior Research Associate, Center for Global Health Science and Security, Georgetown University, United States. Matthew R. Boyce is a PhD candidate at Georgetown University and a Senior Research Associate at the Center for Global Health Science and Security. He serves as the head research associate for the Center's work on urban pandemic preparedness, has advocated for improving health security and public health preparedness in urban environments, and worked with municipal authorities throughout the COVID-19 pandemic to support the local response to the outbreak.