Saturday, 15 November 2025

Mitigating Pandemic Impact: A Systematic Model for Public Health Action |Chapter 5 | An Overview of Disease and Health Research Vol. 7

 

Population growth, as well as the current ease of global interconnectedness, has created an environment conducive to the rapid emergence and spread of infectious diseases, posing a significant threat to global health security. This document describes a systematic framework for the containment and management of these threats, focusing on the principles of Emergency Preparedness, Resilience, and Response (EPRR). The initial and therefore most critical containment barrier is the effective surveillance of primary care physicians, who must maintain a high level of suspicion to detect unusual or epidemiologically suspicious cases. The response to this type of crisis includes the immediate isolation of patients with suspected or confirmed disease, infection control measures, and rapid reporting, all of which are crucial to gain as much time as possible and thus prevent further transmission of the pathogen. If infections cannot be contained, an Outbreak Control Team is deployed to lead a public health response that integrates epidemiology, logistics, and risk communication. The strategic measures required at different levels of care are also detailed, ranging from adapting hospital workflows and managing resource shortages to orienting primary care to manage large patient volumes. Emphasis is placed on the use of traditional public health tools such as screening, isolation, contact tracing, and social distancing in the face of the uncertainty generated by the crisis. The conclusion of the acute phase then gives way to a crucial stage of recovery and learning from the experience, where a structured post-incident review and ongoing training strengthen the future resilience of systems. This approach, with its three proposed interdependent pillars, is intended to be the cornerstone for society's adaptation to the unpredictable nature of biological crises.

 

 

Author(s) Details

Miztli David Aguilar-Caballero
Department of Research and Technological Development, Directorate of Teaching and Research, Institute of Public Health from Guanajuato State, Guanajuato, Mexico.

 

Juan Pablo Becerra-Martinez
Department of Research and Technological Development, Directorate of Teaching and Research, Institute of Public Health from Guanajuato State, Guanajuato, Mexico.

 

Ma Guadalupe León-Verdín
Department of Research and Technological Development, Directorate of Teaching and Research, Institute of Public Health from Guanajuato State, Guanajuato, Mexico.

 

Maria de Jesus Gallardo-Luna
Department of Research and Technological Development, Directorate of Teaching and Research, Institute of Public Health from Guanajuato State, Guanajuato, Mexico.

 

Efraín Navarro-Olivos
Directorate of Teaching and Research, Institute of Public Health from Guanajuato State, Guanajuato, Mexico.

 

Leticia Zamora-Ramos
General Directorate of Medical Care, Institute of Public Health from Guanajuato State, Guanajuato, Mexico.

 

Nicolas Padilla-Raygoza
Department of Research and Technological Development, Directorate of Teaching and Research, Institute of Public Health from Guanajuato State, Guanajuato, Mexico.

 

Please see the book here :- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/aodhr/v7/6536

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