CDC Foundation COVID‐19 emergency response programming: Evaluating the equitability and sustainability of emergency‐response partnerships via survey

Author:

Bednar Hailey1,McMillan Suzanne1,Kittle Alannah1ORCID,Whitton Alaina1,Adeboyejo Ramot1,Powell Rachel1ORCID,Evans Dorothy1ORCID,Sidibe Turquoise1

Affiliation:

1. Response, Crisis and Preparedness Unit CDC Foundation Atlanta Georgia USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThe CDC Foundation plays a critical role in public health emergency response through its ability to quickly mobilize funding and support by establishing formal partnerships with grantees and providing rapid resources and technical assistance. Since the activation of the CDC Foundation's Emergency Response Fund for COVID‐19 in January of 2020, the CDC Foundation has funded more than 400 projects addressing various needs that have arisen from the COVID‐19 pandemic with a wide range of partners, including non‐profit organizations, health departments, private organizations, community‐based organizations (CBOs), universities, laboratories, institutes, and educational organizations. The CDC Foundation's emergency response unit disseminated a Partnership Impact Survey to assess grantee partners' experience working with the CDC Foundation in response to the COVID‐19 pandemic.Study typeMixed methods, qualitative and quantitative.MethodsThe survey was distributed to 285 grantees and included both quantitative and qualitative information about partnership with the CDC Foundation.ResultsThe survey results and evaluation indicate that, through collaboration and feedback mechanisms, the CDC Foundation implemented successful public health partnerships with various partners during the COVID‐19 response, from the private sector to academia to health departments to community‐based organizations.ConclusionSurvey results show that CDC Foundation‐funded partnerships have made an impact on the sustainability and capacity of partner organizations, and have had a positive impact on local, national, and international efforts to combat the spread and negative effects of COVID‐19.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Marketing,Strategy and Management,Economics and Econometrics

Reference3 articles.

1. CDC. (2022).Social Determinants of Health. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Published December 8 2022. Accessed December 19 2022.https://www.cdc.gov/about/sdoh/index.html

2. Building multisectoral partnerships for population health and health equity;Fawcett S.;Prev Chronic Dis,2010

3. The private partners of public health: Public‐private alliances for public good;McDonnell S.;Prev Chronic Dis,2009

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