Italian Public Health Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Case Report from the Field, Insights and Challenges for the Department of Prevention
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Context and Role of the Department of Prevention
3. Local Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
- (1)
- Support to the local health authority for coordination and management of the crisis:
- Membership of local crisis task force.
- Epidemic risk assessment and analysis of scenarios and health system capacity (e.g., isolation, laboratory testing, and medical services).
- Development and updating of local emergency plans.
- Coordination with institutions (i.e., local councils, school authorities, civil protection) and non-healthcare bodies (e.g., business categories).
- Provision of information and education to healthcare workforce (e.g., use of personal protective devices, hand washing, waste management).
- Advice for vulnerable groups (e.g., elderly and frail population), schools, and businesses.
- Designating dedicated facilities for isolation.
- (2)
- Internal reorganization and infrastructure:
- Contingency plan: rescheduling non-urgent activities and maintaining only essential programs (e.g., childhood vaccination), telemedicine (e.g., legal medicine), assignment of staff to COVID-19 tasks, and protection of the workforce.
- Joint integrated response with primary care teams for detection, assessment, rapid reporting, and active surveillance of suspected or confirmed COVID-19 cases.
- Establishment of an alert system and dedicated helpline.
- Information system for the management and traceability of testing.
- Sharing practices and data with other DPs.
- (3)
- Blocking and tackling:
- Active investigation of cases (suspected, probable, and confirmed) and clusters and contact tracing (concentric circles approach).
- Deciding on the necessity for quarantine and home isolation.
- Swabbing and testing, especially through proximity diagnostics (i.e., mobile units, drive-through).
- Active surveillance for people under quarantine and home isolation.
- Implementation of orders and advice on physical distancing, environmental hygiene, mortuary police, veterinary medicine, and food safety.
- Guidance and controls on physical distancing and other preventive measures in different community settings (e.g., at grocers, factories, public spaces).
- Advice and support for risk assessment and health surveillance in workplaces and other community settings (e.g., nursing homes).
- Risk communication and community engagement practices [36].
- Travel advice and screenings of travelers.
- Collection, analysis, and dissemination of surveillance data (i.e., dashboard).
4. SWOT Analysis
4.1. Strengths
- National event-based surveillance and analysis for public health emergencies and laboratory capacity for detecting prioritized diseases and providing real-time data [38].
- Well-functioning national influenza surveillance network that is supported by regional reference laboratories [39].
- Consolidated experience in first-line response to infectious emergencies, including the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), the influenza pandemic, and Chikungunya, as well as the measles outbreaks and epidemic meningitis.
- National coordination and progressive strengthening of the response, consistent with risk assessments and recommendations of the World Health Organization and the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control.
- Key role of DP in the governance of the emergency within the Local Health Authority.
- Comprehensive and integrated community-based response supported by all the units of the DP (i.e., public hygiene, occupational health, food and nutrition, veterinary healthcare, epidemiology).
- Awareness and early activation of the public health community.
4.2. Weaknesses
- Inadequacy of national and regional public health emergency preparedness as well as response planning and operations, including laboratory capacity and medical countermeasures [38], which limited the ability to scale up the response.
- Rapid change, perceived inconsistency, and bureaucratic rigmarole (especially initially) in technical orders and clinical protocols (e.g., case investigation and detection, testing criteria, application of physical distancing), sometimes due to international guidance (e.g., testing criteria, public masking).
- Non-homogenous and limited operational capacity of DP and integration with primary care.
- Patchwork responsiveness and communication at DP level, given the time needed to implement an unprecedented organized response.
- Reactive and “local mindset” in critical thinking and “homemade” solutions to support operations of DPs (i.e., contingency plans and organigrams, applications of national guidance).
- Sparse availability of tools for data integration and smart technologies deployable to support contact tracing, surveillance, and other public health interventions.
4.3. Opportunities
- Greater mandate and expanded capacity for preparedness planning, surveillance, and scientific advisory support from European and Italian national authorities.
- Rapid upgrade of national and regional infrastructure for emergency response, including increased human resources capacity and “protected” supply chains.
- Allocation of resources and reengineering integration models and tools for robust collaboration, particularly “intra-territorial care”, between public health and primary care agencies.
- Pragmatic and action-oriented reframing of duties and powers between healthcare and other institutional authorities and politics.
- Accountable response supported by exponential technologies (e.g., smartphone applications, ultra-rapid testing, artificial intelligence, networks, and sensors) and effective policies for real-life implementation of telemedicine.
4.4. Threats
- Insufficient resilience of supply chains for protective equipment and other medical countermeasures.
- Health consequences of prolonged interruption or delay of population-based prevention programs (e.g., mass oncological screening, vaccination campaigns) and clinical care.
- Inconsistencies between regional strategies that alter the ability to set up uniform, robust planning for future responses to support overextended health and social care.
- Substantial countrywide social, political, and economic disruption that impacts health and social services.
5. Lesson Learned
- To act swiftly in protecting medical personnel, to avoid loss of personnel capacity and limit nosocomial virus spread.
- For early and smart swabbing primarily linked to epidemiological investigations, and tracing of high-yield contacts (including home testing) and risk categories (e.g., health and social care workforce, personnel of “essential services”).
- For acute respiratory infection/influenza-like illness sentinel surveillance through sentinel general practice and telephone/app helplines.
- For policies and rationale for rapid point-of-care diagnostic testing and seroepidemiologic population surveys.
- For optimizing the use and benefits of public health interventions through real-time accessibility of data and systematic evaluation.
6. Conclusions
- Driving and organizing boot-on-the-ground prevention and surveillance to protect vulnerable groups and the general population.
- Continuing to reshape the public health risk assessment and management system to ensure optimal epidemic response capacity.
- Continuing education and capacity building of public health workers.
- Standardizing terminology, communication tools, guidelines, and actionable protocols for practice.
- Replacing structurally bureaucratic management and low-value interventions with pragmatic local, community-based practice and scientifically sound practice.
7. Key Points
- The Department of Prevention is the entity of the Local Health Authority of the Italian National Health Service in charge of hygiene and public health, including the management of epidemiologic emergencies.
- Since the beginning of the outbreak, the work of the Departments of Prevention was crucial in supporting coordination and management of response operations at the local level, as well as supporting and managing activities of case finding, tracing and testing, and quarantining and home isolation, as well as other public health community measures (e.g., hygiene practice, workplace surveillance).
- Analysis and reporting of the local response may inform understanding of complexity of actions and challenges for controlling the COVID-19 pandemic faced by public health professionals.
- A community-based response to COVID-19 needs public health and primary care; regional and local differences in organization and strategies may explain different outcomes.
- Public health work is a key driver for a safe lifting of social distancing restrictions after the end of the lockdown.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Torri, E.; Sbrogiò, L.G.; Di Rosa, E.; Cinquetti, S.; Francia, F.; Ferro, A. Italian Public Health Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Case Report from the Field, Insights and Challenges for the Department of Prevention. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 3666. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17103666
Torri E, Sbrogiò LG, Di Rosa E, Cinquetti S, Francia F, Ferro A. Italian Public Health Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Case Report from the Field, Insights and Challenges for the Department of Prevention. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(10):3666. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17103666
Chicago/Turabian StyleTorri, Emanuele, Luca Gino Sbrogiò, Enrico Di Rosa, Sandro Cinquetti, Fausto Francia, and Antonio Ferro. 2020. "Italian Public Health Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Case Report from the Field, Insights and Challenges for the Department of Prevention" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 10: 3666. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17103666
APA StyleTorri, E., Sbrogiò, L. G., Di Rosa, E., Cinquetti, S., Francia, F., & Ferro, A. (2020). Italian Public Health Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Case Report from the Field, Insights and Challenges for the Department of Prevention. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(10), 3666. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17103666