Updated
Updated · Gothamist · May 25
NYC Activates World Cup Health Command for 1 Million Visitors as MetLife Hosts 8 Matches
Updated
Updated · Gothamist · May 25

NYC Activates World Cup Health Command for 1 Million Visitors as MetLife Hosts 8 Matches

1 articles · Updated · Gothamist · May 25
  • June 1 marks the start of a special incident command system that NYC Health Commissioner Alister Martin says will run through July, with some staff reassigned full-time to World Cup-related public health response.
  • More than 1 million visitors are expected in the New York area during the tournament, and officials say the six-week footprint across all five boroughs and New Jersey requires a larger-than-usual response for risks including heat, food poisoning and infectious disease.
  • Bellevue, hospitals and emergency agencies have spent about a year running drills, including a four-day simulation moving fictional infectious-disease patients from LaGuardia to Bellevue and later exercises for mass-casualty and coordinated-attack scenarios.
  • New Jersey is also tightening its response system after preparations exposed delays in manually checking hospital capacity, replacing call-by-call coordination with predetermined patient-routing guidelines.
  • The World Cup buildup overlaps with Pride, the Puerto Rican Day Parade and America’s 250th birthday events, while health officials are also tracking Ebola outbreaks in Uganda and Congo and a U.S. measles surge.
Can officials truly safeguard millions of fans spread across 16 cities from a fast-moving outbreak?
Will the World Cup's massive health security plan become the costly new standard for all major public events?
With extreme heat now a 'near certain' threat, is hosting summer mega-events becoming an impossible public health challenge?