Other MCM Collaborations (Non-Government Organizations)
In addition to extensive work with U.S. government agencies, the FDA works with a variety of other non-government organizations (NGOs)—domestic and international—to support development of and access to medical countermeasures, or MCMs. These MCM partnerships include, but are not limited to, the following examples.
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, Health and Medicine Division (NASEM-HMD)
The FDA participates in the Forum on Medical and Public Health Preparedness for Disasters and Emergencies to provide national leadership in coordinating ongoing efforts among members from federal, state, and local government; business; and professional associations to develop sustainable partnerships between the public and private sector so that communities are adequately prepared for natural or human-made catastrophic events.
National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO)
The FDA actively participates in and contributes to planning of the annual public health Preparedness Summit, and works with NACCHO and other organizations to support state, tribal, local, and territorial public health preparedness.
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
In 2017, the FDA and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation signed an MOU establishing a framework to facilitate collaboration to carry out common goals to improve public health by stimulating and fostering medical product innovation and enabling medical product development, including medical countermeasures. Continued collaborations under this MOU include a broad range of topics such as developing over-the-counter influenza diagnostics, identifying immune correlates of protection for vaccines of public health significance, and developing animal models to support the evaluation of vaccines.
Advanced manufacturing public-private partnerships
To proactively address challenges presented by advanced and continuous manufacturing technologies, the FDA representatives actively participate in ongoing public-private partnerships. These partnerships include U.S. government agencies, academia, research institutes, and industry. See, for example: FDA Efforts to Connect Manufacturers and Health Care Entities: The FDA, Department of Veterans Affairs, National Institutes of Health, and America Makes Form a COVID-19 response Public-Private Partnership
MCM regulatory science collaborations
To help develop solutions to complex regulatory science challenges, the FDA funds MCM-related regulatory science through intramural and extramural research grants. The goal of the MCM regulatory science program is to develop the tools, standards, and approaches to assess medical countermeasure safety, efficacy, quality, and performance and to help translate cutting-edge science and technology into innovative, safe, and effective MCMs. Learn more: MCM Regulatory Science
Contact us
Want to partner with FDA on MCM-related initiatives? Contact AskMCMi@fda.hhs.gov.