TUESDAY, April 5, 2022 (HealthDay News) — In an effort to modernize an agency that has come under fire for its handling of the pandemic, the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday that the agency would undergo a month-long review of its inner workings.
In an email sent to agency employees, Rochelle Walensky, M.D., said she has hired a senior federal health official outside the Atlanta-based agency to conduct the review to “kick off an evaluation of CDC’s structure, systems, and processes,” The Washington Post reported.
“Over the past year, I have heard from many of you that you would like to see CDC build on its rich history and modernize for the world around us,” she wrote in the email. “I am grateful for your efforts to lean into the hard work of transforming CDC for the better. I look forward to our collective efforts to position CDC, and the public health community, for greatest success in the future.”
The review, which will start April 11, will be led by Jim Macrae, associate administrator for primary health care at the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), The Post reported. Walensky said the revamp would focus on beefing up the nation’s public health workforce, data modernization, laboratory capacity, health equity, and rapid response to disease outbreaks. She also asked three senior CDC leaders to gather feedback on the agency, including suggestions for change.
Since the pandemic began, the venerable agency has been criticized heavily for its response, from initial delays developing a COVID-19 test, to the severe eligibility limits to get the test, to missteps often blamed on the Trump administration. But even under Biden, the agency’s guidance on masking, isolation/quarantine, and booster doses has been seen as confusing at best. A consistent criticism has been the agency’s failure to be agile, especially with analysis and release of real-time data.
Walensky seemed to acknowledge those criticisms in brief public remarks about the reasons for the reorganization, The Post reported. “Never in its 75-year history has [the] CDC had to make decisions so quickly, based on often limited, real-time and evolving science,” she said in the statement. “… As we’ve challenged our state and local partners, we know that now is the time for CDC to integrate the lessons learned into a strategy for the future.”
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