§ 300hh–10.
Coordination of preparedness for and response to all-hazards public health emergencies
(b)
Duties
Subject to the authority of the Secretary, the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response shall utilize experience related to public health emergency preparedness and response, biodefense, medical countermeasures, and other relevant topics to carry out the following functions:
(4)
Coordination
(B)
State, local, and tribal integration
(C)
Emergency medical services
(D)
Policy coordination and strategic direction
(E)
Identification of inefficiencies
Identify and minimize gaps, duplication, and other inefficiencies in medical and public health preparedness and response activities and recommend actions necessary to overcome these obstacles, such as—
(i)
improving coordination with relevant Federal officials;
(ii)
partnering with other public or private entities to leverage capabilities maintained by such entities, as appropriate and consistent with this subsection; and
(iii)
coordinating efforts to support or establish new capabilities, as appropriate.
(F)
Coordination of grants and agreements
Align and coordinate medical and public health grants and cooperative agreements as applicable to preparedness and response activities authorized under this chapter, to the extent possible, including program requirements, timelines, and measurable goals, and in consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, to—
(i)
optimize and streamline medical and public health preparedness and response capabilities and the ability of local communities to respond to public health emergencies; and
(ii)
gather and disseminate best practices among grant and cooperative agreement recipients, as appropriate.
(G)
Drill and operational exercises
Carry out drills and operational exercises each year, including national-level and State-level full-scale exercises not less than once every 4 years, in consultation with the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Defense, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and other applicable Federal departments and agencies, as necessary and appropriate, to identify, inform, and address gaps in and policies related to all-hazards medical and public health preparedness and response, including exercises—
(i)
based on
1
So in original. Probably should be followed by a dash.
(I)
identified threats for which countermeasures are available and for which no countermeasures are available; and
(II)
unknown threats for which no countermeasures are available;
(ii)
that assess the ability of the Strategic National Stockpile, as appropriate, to provide medical countermeasures, medical products, and other supplies, including ancillary medical supplies, to support the response to a public health emergency or potential public health emergency, including a threat that requires the large-scale and simultaneous deployment of stockpiles and a long-term public health and medical response; and
(iii)
conducted in coordination with State and local health officials.
(H)
National security priority
(J)
Medical product and supply capacity planning
Coordinate efforts within the Department of Health and Human Services to support—
(i)
preparedness for medical product and medical supply needs directly related to responding to chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear threats, including emerging infectious diseases, and incidents covered by the National Response Framework, including—
(I)
sharing information, including with appropriate stakeholders, related to the anticipated need for, and availability of, such products and supplies during such responses;
(II)
supporting activities, which may include public-private partnerships, to maintain capacity of medical products and medical supplies, as applicable and appropriate; and
(III)
planning for potential surges in medical supply needs for purposes of a response to such a threat; and
(ii)
situational awareness with respect to anticipated need for, and availability of, such medical products and medical supplies within the United States during a response to such a threat.
(7)
Countermeasures budget plan
Develop, and update not later than March 15 of each year, a coordinated 5-year budget plan based on the medical countermeasure priorities described in subsection (d), including with respect to chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear agent or agents that may present a threat to the Nation, including such agents that are novel or emerging infectious diseases, and the corresponding efforts to develop qualified countermeasures (as defined in
section 247d–6a of this title), security countermeasures (as defined in
section 247d–6b of this title), and qualified pandemic or epidemic products (as defined in
section 247d–6d of this title) for each such threat. Each such plan shall—
(A)
include consideration of the entire medical countermeasures enterprise, including—
(i)
basic research and advanced research and development;
(ii)
approval, clearance, licensure, and authorized uses of products;
(iii)
procurement, stockpiling, maintenance, and potential replenishment (including manufacturing capabilities) of all products in the Strategic National Stockpile;
(iv)
the availability of technologies that may assist in the advanced research and development of countermeasures and opportunities to use such technologies to accelerate and navigate challenges unique to countermeasure research and development; and
(v)
potential deployment, distribution, and utilization of medical countermeasures; development of clinical guidance and emergency use instructions for the use of medical countermeasures; and, as applicable, potential postdeployment activities related to medical countermeasures;
(B)
inform prioritization of resources and include measurable outputs and outcomes to allow for the tracking of the progress made toward identified priorities;
(C)
identify medical countermeasure life-cycle costs to inform planning, budgeting, and anticipated needs within the continuum of the medical countermeasure enterprise consistent with
section 247d–6b of this title;
(D)
identify the full range of anticipated medical countermeasure needs related to research and development, procurement, and stockpiling, including the potential need for indications, dosing, and administration technologies, and other countermeasure needs as applicable and appropriate;
(E)
be made available, not later than March 15 of each year, to the Committee on Appropriations and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate and the Committee on Appropriations and the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the House of Representatives; and
(F)
not later than March 15 of each year, be made publicly available in a manner that does not compromise national security.
(f)
Protection of national security from threats
(1)
In general
In carrying out subsection (b)(3), the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response shall implement strategic initiatives or activities to address threats, including pandemic influenza and which may include a chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear agent (including any such agent with a significant potential to become a pandemic), that pose a significant level of risk to public health and national security based on the characteristics of such threat. Such initiatives shall include activities to—
(A)
accelerate and support the advanced research, development, manufacturing capacity, procurement, and stockpiling of countermeasures, including initiatives under
section 247d–7e(c)(4)(F) of this title;
(B)
support the development and manufacturing of virus seeds, clinical trial lots, and stockpiles of novel virus strains; and
(C)
maintain or improve preparedness activities, including for pandemic influenza.
(2)
Authorization of appropriations
(B)
Supplement, not supplant
(C)
Documentation required
([July 1, 1944, ch. 373], title XXVIII, § 2811, as added [Pub. L. 109–417, title I, § 102(a)(3)], Dec. 19, 2006, [120 Stat. 2833]; amended [Pub. L. 113–5, title I, § 102(a)], Mar. 13, 2013, [127 Stat. 163]; [Pub. L. 114–255, div. A, title III, § 3083], Dec. 13, 2016, [130 Stat. 1141]; [Pub. L. 116–22, title III, § 302(a)], (b), title IV, §§ 401, 402(b), 404(b), title V, § 501, title VII, § 703(b), June 24, 2019, [133 Stat. 934], 942, 943, 948, 950, 963; [Pub. L. 117–263, div. G, title LXXI, § 7143(d)(4)], Dec. 23, 2022, [136 Stat. 3663]; [Pub. L. 117–328, div. FF, title II, § 2103(b)(2)], (c), Dec. 29, 2022, [136 Stat. 5712], 5713.)