The Health Security Supplement, “What Works? Lessons Learned in Global Health Security Implementation” shares tangible examples from CDC and partners’ work to help countries build core public health capacities to quickly identify and address public health threats at their source. Articles highlight the value of effective partnerships, the strong link between local and global public health, and the importance of having measurable targets to improve global health security.
Access Health Security Supplement contents using the following links:
- The Road to Achieving Global Health Security: Accelerating Progress and Spurring Urgency to Fill Remaining Gaps
- Lessons Learned in Global Health Security Implementation
- Challenges in Public Health Rapid Response Team Management
- Lessons Learned in the Development of a Web-based Surveillance Reporting System and Dashboard to Monitor Acute Febrile Illnesses in Guangdong and Yunnan Provinces, China, 2017-2019
- Community-based Surveillance in Côte d’Ivoire
- Leveraging Partnerships to Maximize Global Health Security Improvements in Guinea, 2015-2019
- National Public Health Institute Legal Framework: A Tool to Build Public Health Capacity
- Action-based Costing for National Action Plans for Health Security: Accelerating Progress Toward the International Health Regulations (2005)
- Cost Analysis of Health Facility Electronic Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response in One District in Sierra Leone: Lessons Learned
- Implementing Nationwide Facility-based Electronic Disease Surveillance in Sierra Leone: Lessons Learned
- Lessons Learned from Reinforcing Epidemiologic Surveillance During the 2017 Ebola Outbreak in the Likati District, Democratic Republic of Congo
- Sample Transport Optimization: Mali Pilot Study
- Designing and Piloting a Specimen Transport System in Burkina Faso
- Improving Cross-Border Preparedness and Response: Lessons Learned From 3 Lassa Fever Outbreaks Across Benin, Nigeria, and Togo, 2017-2019
- One Field Epidemiologist per 200,000 Population: Lessons Learned from Implementing a Global Health Workforce Target