Conducting an antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea outbreak tabletop exercise in 2 jurisdictions provided opportunities to evaluate response plans, identify critical gaps, and strengthen preparedness and response effectiveness before an outbreak. Background Responding… Click to show full abstract
Conducting an antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea outbreak tabletop exercise in 2 jurisdictions provided opportunities to evaluate response plans, identify critical gaps, and strengthen preparedness and response effectiveness before an outbreak. Background Responding effectively to outbreaks of antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea (ARGC) in the future will likely prove challenging. Tabletop exercises (TTXs) may assist local, state, and federal public health officials evaluate existing ARGC outbreak response plans, strengthen preparedness and response effectiveness, and identify critical gaps to address before an outbreak. Methods In 2018 to 2019, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) collaborated with state partners to develop and implement TTXs to simulate a public health emergency involving an ARGC outbreak. Before the TTXs, 2 state-local health department pairs developed ARGC outbreak response plans. During each 1-day exercise (in Indiana and Illinois), participants discussed roles, clinical management, public health response, and communication based on predeveloped response plans. Observers identified outbreak response strengths and gaps, and participants completed feedback forms. Results Forty-one (Illinois) and 48 people (Indiana) participated in each TTX, including sexually transmitted disease clinical staff, laboratorians, public health infectious disease program staff, and CDC observers. Strengths and gaps varied by jurisdiction, but identified gaps included: (1) local access to gonorrhea culture and timely antimicrobial susceptibility testing, (2) protocols for clinical management of suspected treatment failures, (3) communication plans, and (4) clarity regarding state and local responsibilities. The CDC observers identified opportunities to provide national-level technical assistance, foster local antimicrobial susceptibility testing, and develop further response guidance. Tabletop exercises summary reports were used to guide modifications to local response plans to address gaps. Conclusions The TTXs allowed participants to practice responding to a simulated public health emergency and may have enhanced local response capacity. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention made TTX implementation materials publicly available.
               
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