Friday, June 10, 2016

Secretary Burwell Calls Governors to Discuss Zika Preparedness

 
On June 9, 2016, HHS Secretary Sylvia M. Burwell and CDC Director Tom Frieden, along with Deputy Homeland Security Advisor Amy Pope at the White House hosted a video tele-conference with Governors and local officials from states believed to be at the highest risk for local transmission of Zika.  The discussion focused on the Federal government’s support of and partnering with state and local governments as they conduct Zika preparedness and response efforts. In addition, the discussion covered guidance that the Federal government is providing today to states to help them prepare for cases of local transmission as we enter the summer months, which are the height of mosquito season.  Governors from Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas joined the call along with officials from Georgia, Hawaii, California, and Los Angeles County.

During the call, Burwell and Frieden briefed the governors on the Administration’s Zika response efforts to date. Burwell stressed the importance of states quickly implementing mosquito control and surveillance activities; ensuring sufficient laboratory capacity to handle indicated diagnostic testing needs; communicating with the public, particularly pregnant women and women of childbearing age and returning travelers; about the risk of mosquito-borne  and sexual transmission of Zika; and taking additional steps to ensure the safety of the blood supply.

Burwell also stressed the need for Congress to pass the Administration’s full emergency funding request so that states and territories have the funding they need to fight Zika.

CDC Director Frieden highlighted federal resources available to states, including technical assistance from CDC; funding for preparedness and response, building laboratory capacity, and technical support for vector control; CDC’s Emergency Response Team (CERT), a group of public health experts who can be mobilized and deployed upon confirmed local transmission; and guidance to assist state, local, and territorial public health officials in preparedness and response planning.

Frieden also discussed CDC’s draft Zika Response Plan document, a resource document that outlines Federal and state roles in responding to a potential case of local Zika transmission in the continental United States and Hawaii. The draft response plan, created with input from state and local officials, includes detailed guidance for states and local jurisdictions on critical areas including but not limited to: protocol for the initial response to local transmission of Zika, defining and communicating with the public about a Zika transmission area for multiple confirmed cases of local transmission, and technical assistance and expanded capacity for mosquito surveillance and control. Several governors expressed appreciation for the call and the urgent need for additional funding, and asked for further communication as mosquito activity increases this summer.

Secretary Burwell also committed to working with governors to maintain support and an ongoing dialogue as federal, state, and local officials prepare for local transmission of Zika and continue to respond to travel-associated cases in their jurisdictions. 

Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

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