Men's Health Month
What We Do
Why It Matters
CDC is committed to strengthening the nation’s health security by protecting against public health threats, whether they begin at home or abroad, or if they are natural or man-made. We know that when we don’t respond quickly and to scale, outbreaks become epidemics, natural disasters become crucibles for illness, and the human toll of terrorist attacks can mount.
State and local health departments must stand ready to handle many different types of emergencies that threaten the health and resilience of families, communities, and the nation. Having people who know what to do, and having the resources in place to allow them to do their jobs, saves lives.
As one of the nation’s most critical public health investments, we have an obligation to capture our work annually and share lessons that inform our strategy over time. One way we do this is through our annual report, referred to as the National Snapshot for CDC’s preparedness and response investments.
Who We Are
An emergency can happen at any moment, and every community in the U.S. must be ready to respond. A pandemic, natural disaster, or chemical or radiological release often strikes without warning. No matter what the cause, the Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response works with partners across the U.S. and the world to protect health 24/7.
CDC Activations
The CDC Emergency Operations Center (EOC) can be activated in response to natural or manmade disasters, disease outbreaks, and other public health emergencies. Since its inception in September 2001, the EOC has responded to more than 62 public health threats, including hurricanes, foodborne disease outbreaks, the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic, and the Haiti cholera outbreak.
Current Activations:
Did you know? The CDC EOC has been activated more than 91% of the time in the last 7 years.
Zika Updates
Pregnant Women with Any Lab Evidence of Zika Virus Infection*
- US States and DC: 1,883
- US Territories: 3,916
*Source: Pregnancy Registries as of May 23, 2017
Zika Virus Disease Cases Reported to ArboNET*
- US States and DC: 5,283
- US Territories: 36,587
*Source: ArboNET as of June 7, 2017
Clinicians and Health Departments
COCA prepares clinicians to respond to emerging health threats and public health emergencies by communicating relevant, timely information related to disease outbreaks, disasters, terrorism events, and other health alerts.
CDC’s Health Alert Network (HAN) is CDC’s primary method of sharing cleared information about urgent public health incidents with public information officers; federal, state, territorial, and local public health practitioners; clinicians; and public health laboratories.
Additional Resources
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Public Health keeps a lookout for algal blooms, monitors city and county beaches
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Flood victims file claims as new records show city staff tried to sound alarm before flooding
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Study links pesticide used to fight Zika in Florida to health impacts in Chinese babies
- Page last reviewed: June 13, 2017
- Page last updated: June 13, 2017
- Content source: