By Brian Labus
The Conversation
President Donald Trump recently appointed
Vice President Mike Pence to lead the government’s response to the COVID-19
outbreak and control public statements by government health officials about
the crisis.
In the days since, health departments
throughout the country have investigated potential cases, announced new cases and declared public health emergencies, all without the approval of the
vice president.
So who really is in charge of the outbreak
response?
As with most things in American government,
the answer is complicated.
Power to the states
Some framers of the Constitution were
concerned about giving the federal government too much power, so the 10th Amendment reserves to the states any powers not
specifically delegated to the federal government in the U.S. Constitution.
The federal government is responsible for preventing infectious disease threats
from entering the country and moving from state to state. This is why the
federal government could quarantine U.S. citizens returning to the country from
Wuhan, China for 14 days.
States are responsible for protecting the
health of people within their borders. So once the federal quarantine was
completed and the travelers entered their communities, the job of monitoring
them and their contacts fell to the states.
This is why the response to the same
situation may seem different in each state: It is.
When states implement isolation (keeping
sick people away from everyone else) or quarantine (keeping
well, but potentially exposed, people away from everyone else), they do it
based on state laws. Public health professionals might agree that each state
needs to take the same action, but each state will do so according to its own
laws.
Another complexity is that states decide how
much power to give counties, cities and other localities in their states to
address outbreaks like COVID-19 as well as other public health issues. So those
agencies will also make their own decisions that can appear separate from
federal and state policies.
Some states have no local health departments and others have hundreds of
them. Some states have only county health departments and others
have health departments in individual cities.
Practically, this means that even though the
federal government plays an important role, the job of protecting the health of
the public ultimately rests with individual states.
Money: A major challenge
A 2019 report by the Trust for America’s Health, which describes
itself as a “nonpartisan public health policy, research, and advocacy
organization,” found that funding for the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention “has not kept pace with the nation’s growing public health needs
and emerging threats.” The agency’s budget fell nearly 10% over the past decade
after adjusting for inflation.
In recent days, Congress has passed a US$8.3 billion coronavirus response bill, which
includes $2.2 billion for the CDC to “prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus, domestically or
internationally.”
If public health is a local responsibility,
it certainly has not been funded that way. On average, local communities spend
about $48 per citizen on public health each year, with only about
half of it coming from local sources. The rest is funded by the federal
government or through fees charged directly to patients for clinical services.
Additionally, local health departments have lost 43,000 employees, or 22% of the local public health workforce,
since the Great Recession in 2007-2009.
The coronavirus funding bill passed by
Congress includes $950 million to assist state and local health departments.
This is especially welcome news to state health departments already stretched thin by the day-to-day public health
activities designed to prevent and identify outbreaks in the first place.
While public health is rooted in prevention,
funding for public health activities often comes only once the emergency has
occurred. As a public health practitioner and scholar, it’s clear to me
that it is impossible to prevent disease if the money to fight an outbreak
arrives only once an outbreak is already spreading in the community.
How does anything ever get done?
When an outbreak occurs, even a global
pandemic takes on unique characteristics in each community. Communities differ
in size, climate, average age and the kind of activities that are popular,
among other things. That affects how disease spreads. The strength of the
current system is that state and local public health agencies understand and
reflect their communities.
Local health departments in the U.S. were
formed in response to local needs as early as the late 18th century, decades before federal public health
agencies were established.
Local health departments interview sick
people and work with local doctors and labs to identify and track disease.
State health departments often perform these
functions as well, but also coordinate local responses, provide technical and
financial assistance to the local health departments and run the public health
laboratories.
The federal government supports and
complements the work being done at the state and local level. It provides the
scientific understanding of the virus, develops laboratory tests, implements
quarantines for international travelers, works with governments inside and
outside the U.S. to understand the spread of disease and provides money and
other critical resources.
Public health professionals at every level of
government know their role and rely on the professionals at other levels to
help with the things that are outside of their control.
Surprisingly, the system often works well.
There is a great deal of coordination and information sharing between the levels
about how best to respond.
That’s not to say they always agree.
There can be extensive, and sometimes heated,
discussions about what should be done. While the debates usually happen in
private, sometimes they spill over into the public eye, such as when New York
Governor Andrew Cuomo called the federal government’s response to the coronavirus outbreak
“absurd and nonsensical.”
Ultimately, the decision to take a public
health action, such as to quarantine a patient, is made with the same, shared
backdrop of science – no matter where it occurs.
So, no, if you get sick with coronavirus,
Donald Trump cannot make you stay home. But a government official in your
community can, because that is how the system works.
Correction: This article has been updated to
correct that the federal government is responsible for preventing infectious
disease threats from entering the country, not the county.
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