The three public health professionals from the University of Otago say New Zealand’s current emergency plans focus on influenza and have little guidance for emerging infectious diseases, such as the recent Ebola and Zika outbreaks. Also the National health Emergency Plan: Infectious Diseases, developed in response to the SARS epidemic in 2003, was now out of date, leaving the Influenza Pandemic Preparedness Plan 2010 as the core document.
“The Ministry of Health’s ‘Pandemic Planning and Response’ webpage links only to documents regarding influenza,” point out the authors in an article published today in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health.
“However, preparedness for pandemic influenza does not guarantee preparedness for another emerging infectious disease, as demonstrated by the emergence of blood-borne (Ebola) and vector-borne (Zika) threats in recent years.”
The trio point out that emerging infectious diseases have caused pandemics with the highest death rates in history, including the plague, the influenza of 1918/19, and HIV.
Outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases have also been on the increase since 1940, with many caused by zoonotic diseases (diseases that can be transmitted from animals to people), while at the same time antimicrobial resistance is increasing worldwide in what has been described as a “slow-motion tsunami”.
Recommendations in the article for New Zealand health authorities include:
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