无家可归人群的传染病防备:社区与学术界合作提出的建议。

IF 0.8 4区 医学 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Progress in Community Health Partnerships-Research Education and Action Pub Date : 2024-01-01
Natalia M Rodriguez, Rebecca Ziolkowski, Jodie Hicks, Michelle Dearing, Jennifer Layton, Amanda Balser, Grace Paton, Gregory Loomis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:无家可归者由于居住环境拥挤、医疗保健障碍和潜在慢性病负担过重,传染病传播风险增加:我们是一个多部门的社区-学术合作组织,致力于解决印第安纳州蒂佩卡诺县无家可归者和健康差异的交叉危机。根据我们正在进行的社区参与式研究以及从 COVID-19 应对措施和猴痘准备工作中吸取的经验教训,我们为无家可归人群的传染病防备和风险缓解工作提出了重要建议:针对无家可归人群的传染病防备和应对措施需要强有力的地方合作伙伴关系;对无家可归者收容所和服务机构的工作人员和志愿者进行持续培训和支持;对无家可归者进行有针对性的外联、教育和沟通;在无家可归者收容所制定、传播、执行和评估公共卫生政策的标准化流程。一致性和开放式交流是社区-学术合作取得成功的关键:社区与学术界的合作对于无家可归人群有效防范传染病至关重要。与无家可归者社区和多部门合作伙伴在第一线开展基于社区的参与式研究,从中汲取的经验教训可以改善美国无家可归者和其他弱势社区未来的疫情爆发和大流行应对措施。
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Infectious Disease Preparedness for Homeless Populations: Recommendations from a Community-Academic Partnership.

Background: People experiencing homelessness are at increased risk of infectious disease transmission due to congregate living conditions, barriers to healthcare, and excess burden of underlying chronic disease.

Objectives: We are a multisectoral community-academic partnership working to address the intersecting crises of homelessness and health disparities in Tippecanoe County, Indiana. We offer key recommendations for infectious disease preparedness and risk mitigation for homeless populations based on our ongoing community-based participatory research and lessons learned through COVID-19 response and Monkeypox preparations.

Lessons learned: Infectious disease preparedness and response in homeless populations requires strong local partnerships; ongoing training and support for staff and volunteers of homeless shelters and service agencies; tailored outreach, education, and communication with people experiencing homelessness; and standardized processes for creating, disseminating, enforcing, and evaluating public health policies in homeless shelters. Consistency and open communication are key to a successful community-academic partnership.

Conclusions: Community-academic partnerships are critical to effective infectious disease preparedness in homeless populations. The lessons learned from community-based participatory research with homeless communities and multisectoral partners on the frontline can improve future outbreak and pandemic response for people experiencing homelessness and other vulnerable communities in the United States.

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