Improving National Intelligence for Public Health Preparedness: a methodological approach to finding local multi-sector indicators for health security

The COVID-19 epidemic is the latest evidence of critical gaps in our collective ability to monitor country-level preparedness for health emergencies. The global frameworks that exist to strengthen core public health capacities lack coverage of several preparedness domains and do not provide mechanis...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mishal S Khan, Osman Dar, Neil Squires, Ebere Okereke, Lara Hollmann, Emmanuel Agogo, Aamer Ikram, Tayyab Razi Rathore, Evelien Belfroid, Angela Fehr, Bjorn Gunnar Iversen, Alemnesh H Mirkuzie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2021-01-01
Series:BMJ Global Health
Online Access:https://gh.bmj.com/content/6/1/e004227.full
id doaj-2c559b5807e7433c874ac94906b601a1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2c559b5807e7433c874ac94906b601a12021-07-05T15:01:24ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Global Health2059-79082021-01-016110.1136/bmjgh-2020-004227Improving National Intelligence for Public Health Preparedness: a methodological approach to finding local multi-sector indicators for health securityMishal S Khan0Osman Dar1Neil Squires2Ebere Okereke3Lara Hollmann4Emmanuel Agogo5Aamer Ikram6Tayyab Razi Rathore7Evelien Belfroid8Angela Fehr9Bjorn Gunnar Iversen10Alemnesh H Mirkuzie11London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London, UKChatham House, London, UKGlobal Public Health, Public Health England, London, UKInternational Health Regulations Strengthening Project, Public Health England, London, UKGlobal Health Programme, Chatham House, London, UKNigeria Centre for Disease Control, Abuja, NigeriaPakistan National Institute of Health, Islamabad, PakistanPakistan National Institute of Health, Islamabad, PakistanNational Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven, The NetherlandsRobert Koch Institute, Berlin, GermanyNorwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, NorwayEthiopian Public Health Institute, Addis Ababa, EthiopiaThe COVID-19 epidemic is the latest evidence of critical gaps in our collective ability to monitor country-level preparedness for health emergencies. The global frameworks that exist to strengthen core public health capacities lack coverage of several preparedness domains and do not provide mechanisms to interface with local intelligence. We designed and piloted a process, in collaboration with three National Public Health Institutes (NPHIs) in Ethiopia, Nigeria and Pakistan, to identify potential preparedness indicators that exist in a myriad of frameworks and tools in varying local institutions. Following a desk-based systematic search and expert consultations, indicators were extracted from existing national and subnational health security-relevant frameworks and prioritised in a multi-stakeholder two-round Delphi process. Eighty-six indicators in Ethiopia, 87 indicators in Nigeria and 51 indicators in Pakistan were assessed to be valid, relevant and feasible. From these, 14–16 indicators were prioritised in each of the three countries for consideration in monitoring and evaluation tools. Priority indicators consistently included private sector metrics, subnational capacities, availability and capacity for electronic surveillance, measures of timeliness for routine reporting, data quality scores and data related to internally displaced persons and returnees. NPHIs play an increasingly central role in health security and must have access to data needed to identify and respond rapidly to public health threats. Collecting and collating local sources of information may prove essential to addressing gaps; it is a necessary step towards improving preparedness and strengthening international health regulations compliance.https://gh.bmj.com/content/6/1/e004227.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mishal S Khan
Osman Dar
Neil Squires
Ebere Okereke
Lara Hollmann
Emmanuel Agogo
Aamer Ikram
Tayyab Razi Rathore
Evelien Belfroid
Angela Fehr
Bjorn Gunnar Iversen
Alemnesh H Mirkuzie
spellingShingle Mishal S Khan
Osman Dar
Neil Squires
Ebere Okereke
Lara Hollmann
Emmanuel Agogo
Aamer Ikram
Tayyab Razi Rathore
Evelien Belfroid
Angela Fehr
Bjorn Gunnar Iversen
Alemnesh H Mirkuzie
Improving National Intelligence for Public Health Preparedness: a methodological approach to finding local multi-sector indicators for health security
BMJ Global Health
author_facet Mishal S Khan
Osman Dar
Neil Squires
Ebere Okereke
Lara Hollmann
Emmanuel Agogo
Aamer Ikram
Tayyab Razi Rathore
Evelien Belfroid
Angela Fehr
Bjorn Gunnar Iversen
Alemnesh H Mirkuzie
author_sort Mishal S Khan
title Improving National Intelligence for Public Health Preparedness: a methodological approach to finding local multi-sector indicators for health security
title_short Improving National Intelligence for Public Health Preparedness: a methodological approach to finding local multi-sector indicators for health security
title_full Improving National Intelligence for Public Health Preparedness: a methodological approach to finding local multi-sector indicators for health security
title_fullStr Improving National Intelligence for Public Health Preparedness: a methodological approach to finding local multi-sector indicators for health security
title_full_unstemmed Improving National Intelligence for Public Health Preparedness: a methodological approach to finding local multi-sector indicators for health security
title_sort improving national intelligence for public health preparedness: a methodological approach to finding local multi-sector indicators for health security
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Global Health
issn 2059-7908
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The COVID-19 epidemic is the latest evidence of critical gaps in our collective ability to monitor country-level preparedness for health emergencies. The global frameworks that exist to strengthen core public health capacities lack coverage of several preparedness domains and do not provide mechanisms to interface with local intelligence. We designed and piloted a process, in collaboration with three National Public Health Institutes (NPHIs) in Ethiopia, Nigeria and Pakistan, to identify potential preparedness indicators that exist in a myriad of frameworks and tools in varying local institutions. Following a desk-based systematic search and expert consultations, indicators were extracted from existing national and subnational health security-relevant frameworks and prioritised in a multi-stakeholder two-round Delphi process. Eighty-six indicators in Ethiopia, 87 indicators in Nigeria and 51 indicators in Pakistan were assessed to be valid, relevant and feasible. From these, 14–16 indicators were prioritised in each of the three countries for consideration in monitoring and evaluation tools. Priority indicators consistently included private sector metrics, subnational capacities, availability and capacity for electronic surveillance, measures of timeliness for routine reporting, data quality scores and data related to internally displaced persons and returnees. NPHIs play an increasingly central role in health security and must have access to data needed to identify and respond rapidly to public health threats. Collecting and collating local sources of information may prove essential to addressing gaps; it is a necessary step towards improving preparedness and strengthening international health regulations compliance.
url https://gh.bmj.com/content/6/1/e004227.full
work_keys_str_mv AT mishalskhan improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT osmandar improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT neilsquires improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT ebereokereke improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT larahollmann improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT emmanuelagogo improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT aamerikram improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT tayyabrazirathore improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT evelienbelfroid improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT angelafehr improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT bjorngunnariversen improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
AT alemneshhmirkuzie improvingnationalintelligenceforpublichealthpreparednessamethodologicalapproachtofindinglocalmultisectorindicatorsforhealthsecurity
_version_ 1721318379864719360