We have launched E-mail Alert service,subscribers can receive the latest catalogues free of charge

 
 
You Are Here: Home > Reports

Policy Options on Perfecting the Public Health Emergency Management System (No. 90, 2020)

2020-06-20

By Long Haibo, Research Department of Innovation Development, DRC

Research Report, No. 90, 2020 (Total 5834) 2020-4-28

Abstract: Featured by quick spreading and major impacts on social life, the contagious public health events have a high demand on professional emergency management and emergency disposal capacity with governments at all levels. In order to build a sound public health emergency management system, it is vital to grasp several key points, including risk anticipation, mass mobilization and coordinated prevention and control efforts. The professionalism of epidemic risk anticipation needs to be highlighted, the advantage of a centralized system and the flexible market mechanism need to be combined, and the comprehensive and professional prevention and control need to draw on each other’s strengths. We need to take the epidemic event as a leverage, incorporate the public health event management into national emergency management system and accelerate the transformation of the emergency management system according to the requirements proposed at the Fourth Plenary Session of the 19th CPC Central Committee. To be specific, efforts need to be made in the following five aspects. First, a highly effective and unified command system for emergency response need to be established. Second, the emergency disposal capacities for all kinds of emergency events need to be efficiently coordinated. Third, the emergency material supply system, that could address the daily situation and respond to emergency cases, need to be improved. Fourth, the emergency management needs to be digitalized and bolstered by smart city building. And fifth, the management approaches of governments at primary levels need to be based on a law-based and scientific stance.

Keywords: public health, epidemic prevention and control, emergency management system, governance capacity