J Korean Med Assoc.  2015 Aug;58(8):700-705. 10.5124/jkma.2015.58.8.700.

Improving capability of local public hospital and health center against newly emerging infectious diseases after Middle East respiratory syndrome epidemic in Korea

Affiliations
  • 1Seo-Buk City Hospital, Seoul, Korea.
  • 2Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Hallym University College of Medicine, Chuncheon, Korea. dhkims@hallym.ac.kr

Abstract

Healthcare system in Korea was found to be very vulnerable to public health emergency preparedness and response as demonstrated in the recent outbreak of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus. We need to redefine the function of and improve the capability of local district public hospital and local health center to cope with potential threats by newly emerging infectious disease in the nearer future. While central government may be responsible for early detection of newly emerging infectious disease transmitted from outside of the country, local government and its district-level public healthcare agencies need to primarily control over spread of the disease among the local residents. Governance setting for rapid response required in public health crisis situation appears to be possible based on strong local public health infrastructure for health promotion and disease prevention at si-gun-gu district level. Proper and sustainable investment is also needed for local public hospital with high standard facilities and skilled healthcare manpower since there seems little economic incentives to maintain such facilities in private hospitals. In conclusion, it would be urgent task to improve prevention activities for infectious disease of local health centers and clinical activities of local public hospital. Especially, role and competencies of public health physicians working at the public health center need to be specified as an essential component of public health infrastructure.

Keyword

Disease outbreaks; Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus; Local public hospital; Local health center; Public health infrastructure

MeSH Terms

Civil Defense
Communicable Diseases
Communicable Diseases, Emerging*
Coronavirus
Delivery of Health Care
Disease Outbreaks
Health Promotion
Hospitals, Private
Hospitals, Public*
Investments
Korea*
Local Government
Middle East*
Motivation
Public Health

Cited by  1 articles

Post-MERS: The Strategies to Minimize the Risks from New Epidemics
Won-Chul Lee
J Korean Med Assoc. 2015;58(8):689-691.    doi: 10.5124/jkma.2015.58.8.689.


Reference

1. Cowling BJ, Park M, Fang VJ, Wu P, Leung GM, Wu JT. Preliminary epidemiological assessment of MERS-CoV out-break in South Korea, May to June 2015. Euro Surveill. 2015; 20:pii: 21163.
Article
2. Victorian Government Department of Human Services. Preparing for an influenza pandemic: a tool kit for local government [Internet]. Melbourne: Victorian Government Department of Human Services;2008. cited 2015 Aug 7. Available from: http://humanswineflu.health.vic.gov.au/downloads/pandemic_tool_kit_web.pdf.
3. Krumkamp R, Ahmad A, Kassen A, Hjarnoe L, Syed AM, Aro AR, Reintjes R. Evaluation of national pandemic management policies-A hazard analysis of critical control points approach. Health Policy. 2009; 92:21–26.
Article
4. Logan C. Pandemic preparedness in the states: an assessment of progress and opportunity [Internet]. Washington, DC: NGA Center for Best Practices;2008. cited 2015 Aug 7. Available from: https://transition.fcc.gov/pshs/docs/clearinghouse/best-practices/National_Governors_Association_PANDEMIC_ASSESSMENT_0809.pdf.
5. Department of Communicable Disease Surveillance and Response Global Influenza Programme. WHO checklist for influenza pandemic preparedness planning [Internet]. Geneva: World Health Organization;2005. cited 2015 Aug 7. Available from: http://www.who.int/influenza/resources/documents/checklist/en/.
6. Sconyers J. MASS disease: what public health expects, what hospitals fear [Internet]. Washington, DC: American Health Lawyers Association;2006. cited 2015 Aug 7. Available from: http://ftp.cdc.gov/pub/phlpprep/Legal%20Preparedness%20for%20Pandemic%20Flu/8.0%20-%20Non-Governmental%20Materials/8.3%20Mass%20Disease.pdf.
7. World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe. Hospital preparedness checklist for pandemic influenza: focus on pandemic (H1N1) 2009 [Internet]. Copenhagen: World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe;2009. cited 2015 Aug 7. Available from: http://www.euro.who.int/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/78988/E93006.pdf.
8. Na YM, Lee WJ, Kim Y. What needs to be changed in public health system after Middle East respiratory syndrome epidemic in Korea [Internet]. Seoul: National Assembly;2015. cited 2015 Aug 7. Available from: http://yikim.tistory.com/attachment/cfile29.uf@267ACF45559CF8A12D26DD.pdf.
Full Text Links
  • JKMA
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr