HHS Announces Actions to Counter Biological Threats, Enhance Pandemic Preparedness, and Achieve Health Security

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today announced actions the department will take following National Security Memorandum 15, signed by President Biden, directing implementation of the 2022 National Biodefense Strategy and Implementation Plan for Countering Biological Threats, Enhancing Pandemic Preparedness, and Achieving Global Health Security.

The strategy and implementation plan detail a coordinated approach to address the challenges from naturally occurring, deliberate, and accidental biological threats. These threats are among the most serious threats facing the U.S. and the international community. The 2022 strategy builds on the 2018 National Biodefense Strategy, incorporating lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic, and laying out a comprehensive implementation plan with bold, concrete actions to transform our health security.

HHS Actions to Support Implementation of the National Biodefense Strategy

HHS, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR) will lead the implementation of a range of actions in the National Biodefense Strategy and its implementation plan, which integrates elements of the American Pandemic Preparedness: Transforming Our Capabilities. HHS will draw on support from experts across the federal government, as well as provide expertise to support actions led by other federal departments and agencies.

HHS is already executing the strategy with existing funding. Fully achieving these transformative objectives, however, will require the support of Congress to provide additional resources, including the President’s $82 billion request for HHS over five years for pandemic preparedness and biodefense.

Examples of HHS efforts to support implementation of the National Biodefense Strategy include:

Strengthening early warning and awareness of pandemics and biological threats

HHS will lead efforts to improve early warning of biological threats and data availability to support real-time, evidence-based decision-making, including:

Enhancing diagnostic capabilities

To strengthen federal capabilities to effectively mitigate the impact of, respond to, and recover from future bioincidents, HHS will expand capabilities in essential areas, including:

HHS will also work with other departments and agencies to enhance diagnostics capability and capacity to:

Enhancing vaccine and therapeutic capabilities

HHS will work with other departments and agencies to enhance vaccine and therapeutic capacity and capability to:

HHS, together with other departments and agencies, will drive towards achieving the above transformational bold outcomes, recognizing the need for sufficient resources and aggressive action to achieve these objectives.

Expanding Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) surge capacity

HHS will work with others in the federal government to maintain a minimum 90-day PPE surge capability, using both commercial distribution channels as well as stockpiles to support control of pandemics and outbreaks. This capability will be informed by an analysis of the quantities of PPE needed to protect the healthcare and critical infrastructure workforce in any catastrophic biological incident or pandemic. HHS also will assess PPE capacity needs to cover vulnerable populations and a diversity of body types, including children.

HHS will safeguard the PPE supply chain diversity for public and animal health through policy, incentives, regulation, and other tools to reduce dependence on a single region, source, or product. Diversity in this context includes a diverse set of products, such as N95 filtering facepiece respirators and elastomeric respirators, and domestic suppliers.

HHS will also support whole-of-government efforts to accelerate innovations in PPE design and manufacturing for enhanced effectiveness, usability, comfort, affordability, reusability, and fit capabilities, including for use by the general population.

Strengthening the public health workforce

HHS will recruit, train, and sustain a robust, flexible, permanent cadre of essential critical health infrastructure workers, public health laboratory scientists, technicians, and data quality managers to support surveillance and response testing and reporting and support the recruitment of One Health experts and dedicated animal and environmental disease epidemiologists, who are critical frontline workers for human and animal disease control at relevant state and territorial agencies and departments, in all 50 states.

Build innovative clinical-trial infrastructure

HHS will work with other departments and agencies to maintain and expand flexible clinical-trials infrastructure, with the goal of administering candidate countermeasures to participants within 14 days of the identification of a viable countermeasure. This effort will expedite the evaluation of safe and effective vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics for all segments of the population during a nationally or internationally significant biological incident.

HHS, together with other departments and agencies, will drive towards achieving the above transformational bold outcomes, recognizing the need for sufficient resources and aggressive action to achieve these objectives.

Ongoing HHS Biodefense Activities

Already, HHS has worked aggressively to prevent, detect, and respond to pandemics and other biological incidents in a number of critical areas

Vaccines

Antiviral Medications

Diagnostics and Data Analytics

Manufacturing

International Engagements

Other Actions

Note: All HHS press releases, fact sheets and other news materials are available at https://www.hhs.gov/news.
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Last revised: October 18, 2022

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