Abstract

The national response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has highlighted critical weaknesses in domestic health care and public health emergency preparedness, despite nearly 2 decades of federal funding for multiple programs designed to encourage cross-cutting collaboration in emergency response. Health-care coalitions (HCCs), which are funded through the Hospital Preparedness Program, were first piloted in 2007 and have been continuously funded nationwide since 2012 to support broad collaborations across public health, emergency management, emergency medical services, and the emergency response arms of the health-care system within a geographical area. This commentary provides a SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats) analysis to summarize the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats related to the current HCC model against the backdrop of COVID-19. We close with concrete recommendations for better leveraging the HCC model for improved health-care system readiness. These include better evaluating the role of HCCs and their members (including the responsibility of the HCC to better communicate and align with other sectors), reconsidering the existing framework for HCC administration, increasing incentives for meaningful community participation in HCC preparedness, and supporting next-generation development of health-care preparedness systems for future pandemics.

Highlights

  • Pandemic has again demonstrated the limitations of health-care and public health preparedness in the United States

  • The greatest strength of health-care coalitions (HCCs) is summarized in their name—they are a coalition of disparate public and private organizations whose collective mission is to minimize disruption of health-care delivery during disasters and public health emergencies

  • There are over 31,000 HCC members nationwide, and 85% of hospitals, 82% of local health departments, 56% of emergency management organizations, and 27% of emergency medical services (EMS) agencies participate in a HCC.[3]

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Summary

Policy Analysis

Cite this article: Barnett DJ, Knieser L, Errett NA, Rosenblum AJ, Seshamani M, Kirsch TD. Reexamining health-care coalitions in light of COVID-19. Barnett MD, MPH1, Lauren Knieser MPH, DrPH2, Nicole A. Rosenblum MSPH4 , Meena Seshamani MD, PhD5 and Thomas D.

Strengths of HCCs
Weaknesses of HCCs
Opportunities for HCCs
Findings
Threats to HCCs
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