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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter May 1, 2020

Current State of (Dis)Integration: Public Health and Fusion Centers

  • Cody Minks and Anke Richter EMAIL logo

Abstract

Objective

Responding to large-scale public health emergencies relies heavily on planning and collaboration between law enforcement and public health officials. This study examines the current level of information sharing and integration between these domains by measuring the inclusion of public health in the law enforcement functions of fusion centers.

Methods

Survey of all fusion centers, with a 29.9% response rate.

Results

Only one of the 23 responding fusion centers had true public health inclusion, a decrease from research conducted in 2007. Information sharing is primarily limited to information flowing out of the fusion center, with little public health information coming in. Most of the collaboration is done on a personal, informal, ad-hoc basis. There remains a large misunderstanding of roles, capabilities, and regulations by all parties (fusion centers and public health). The majority of the parties appear to be willing to work together, but there but there is no forward momentum to make these desires a reality. Funding and staffing issues seem to be the limiting factor for integration.

Conclusion

These problems need to be urgently addressed to increase public health preparedness and enable a decisive and beneficial response to public health emergencies involving a homeland security response.

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Published Online: 2020-05-01

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