Mon. Sep 16th, 2024

Stockholm, 2 May, 2023

As the pandemic progresses towards a phase of lower intensity, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) presents lessons learned from the response of Europe’s public health sector and highlights follow up actions addressing relevant issues which could contribute to improvements in Europe’s pandemic preparedness.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has taught us valuable lessons, and it is important to review and assess our actions to determine what worked and what didn’t” said Andrea Ammon, ECDC Director. “We need to be better prepared for future public health crises and this should be done through actions in different areas. This includes investing in and strengthening the public health workforce, improving surveillance of infectious diseases, enhancing risk communication and community engagement and embracing collaboration among organisations, countries and regions”, she added. 

All lesson areas identified are closely interconnected. The report identifies two strategic areas requiring organisational and political commitment and investment at national level.

One area is the investment in the public health workforce. It is of vital importance to recruit, train and retain public health professionals, and attract young professionals, especially as the current public health workforce is ageing, as well as plan for surge capacity when responding to a public health crisis.

The other strategic area relates to improvements and investment in preparedness planning and the need for a formalised decision making and crisis management structure that supports intersectoral work. Moreover, legislation governing the control of communicable diseases should also be updated and take into account ethical considerations and human rights.

At the operational level, lessons learned from the pandemic converge around increasing the capacities of public health professionals in risk communication and community engagement to tailor messages more appropriately. In addition, institutions need to develop robust but agile systems to collect and analyse different types of data in support of policy decisions and to dynamically adjust measures to control infectious disease outbreaks.

The new ECDC report is based on several expert consultations with EU country representatives, reports on lessons learned from various EU/EEA countries and an internal exercise conducted with ECDC staff

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