Federal News
GAO Highlights HHS Preparedness Coordination Gaps
March 12, 2026
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has reported that the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) lacks formal coordination mechanisms between its two major public health preparedness programs. This gap poses risks to federal and state readiness amid a heightened threat environment, including potential hostile actions from Iran or its proxies and overlapping state health emergencies. GAO recommends establishing formal collaboration frameworks, joint exercises, and unified communication strategies to strengthen national preparedness and public trust.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should anticipate potential new requirements or solicitations aimed at enhancing interagency coordination, emergency response capabilities, and public health infrastructure.
- Agencies like HHS and FEMA may seek vendors with expertise in integrated emergency management systems, training exercises, and communication platforms.
- Contractors specializing in public health preparedness technologies and services could find emerging opportunities to support federal and state readiness initiatives.
- Organizations should evaluate how to align offerings with GAO recommendations to meet evolving federal preparedness priorities and funding opportunities.
The heightened threat environment has put a spotlight on federal readiness, but a new GAP review shows HHS still lacks formal mechanisms to coordinate its two major preparedness programs.
— Mary Denigan-Macauley, GAO official
Agencies
Department of Health and Human Services, Government Accountability Office, Federal Emergency Management Agency
Locations
Sources
- Amid mounting warnings that Iran or its proxies could strike back, GAO says HHS isn’t fully aligned on public‑health preparedness | Federal News Network · Federal News Network · Mar 11
- A kaleidoscope of global threats—and an underprepared U.S. public health agency | Federal News Network · Federal News Network · Mar 12