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Bioterrorism Presentation

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Bioterrorism Presentation Sharon F. Grigsby, MBA Executive Director Bioterrorism Preparedness Program Public Health Department of Health Services County of Los Angeles – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bioterrorism Presentation


1
Bioterrorism Presentation
  • Sharon F. Grigsby, MBA
  • Executive Director
  • Bioterrorism Preparedness Program
  • Public Health
  • Department of Health Services
  • County of Los Angeles

2
The events of Fall 2001 Challenged Us All
  • Our Sense of Invulnerability
  • Our Self-Confidence
  • Our Awareness of Public Infrastructure,
  • and
  • Our Definitions of First Responders

3
Will the first response to a BT attack be this
4
. or this?
5
Its more likely to look like this.
6
or this.
7
Government Responds
  • January 2002, President approves
  • 1.1 billion for Bioterrorism Preparedness
  • All fifty states, the territories and 4 major
  • metropolitan areas receive funding

8
HHS Funding Sources
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • Focus on infectious disease control, public
    health needs
  • Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, D.C. funded
  • Los Angeles receives 24.6 million
  • Health Resources and Services Administration
  • Funding to States for Hospital Preparedness
  • Los Angeles receives 3.6 million
  • Office of Emergency Preparedness
  • Funding provided for Metropolitan Medical
    Response Systems for 120 largest cities
  • LA, Long Beach, Glendale funded in LA County

9
CDC Funds Public Health for Bioterrorism,
Emerging InfectiousDiseases and other Public
Health Emergencies
  • Develop Comprehensive BT Plans
  • Upgrade Disease Surveillance and Investigation
  • Implement HASTEN with Health Providers
  • Enhance Public Health Laboratory Capability
  • Develop Risk Communication Capacity

10
Lessons Learned from Anthrax Threats
  • Inadequate internal communication system
  • Need real time communication with most physicians
  • Public communication strategy essential
  • Full time central coordination essential

11
Los Angeles County Public Health Threat
Activities Pre-Sept 11th
  • 1999 CDC Funding of 800k
  • Development of Epidemiology Surveillance
    Capacity
  • Development of Emergency Communications HASTEN
  • Enhance Lab Capacity

12
The Role of Public Health
  • Being Prepared
  • Education of medical
  • community
  • Education of public
  • Training of special response teams
  • Participation in exercises for different
    scenarios
  • Development of communication systems
  • Development of interagency protocols

13
The Role of Public Health
  • Initial Response to BT Induced Disease
  • Early detection through surveillance/ rapid
    assessment of reports
  • Mobilize laboratory
  • Rapid confirmation of agent, site, initial
    at-risk population, prophylaxis and/or treatment
  • Alert medical community, ERs, labs
  • Implement disease specific plans (e.g. Smallpox)
  • Determine resource needs and possible quarantine
  • Coordinate with partner agencies
    (local/state/national)

14
The Role of Public Health
  • Continued Response to BT Induced Diseases
  • Closely monitor communication network for new
    information
  • Provide, accurate, timely information to public
  • Continue epidemiologic investigation to refine at
    risk population
  • Assess environmental contamination
  • Provide or coordinate testing/ prophylaxis/
    treatment to at-risk population
  • Access biological stockpiles as necessary

15
BT Challenges in Los Angeles
  • Large geographical area/mobile population
  • real-time reporting mapping applications
  • Victims and/or those they infect may disperse
    before attack recognized
  • communication strategy focusing on effective use
    of news media
  • Victims may present at geographically dispersed
    medical offices and hospitals
  • health provider/facility communication and
    reporting network

16
BT Challenges in Los Angeles
  • Early signs/symptoms nonspecific
  • Provider education through multiple means
  • Medical and laboratory communities not familiar
    with rare BT diseases
  • establish syndromic surveillance
  • provide training to increase awareness
  • enhance collaboration between medical community
    and Public Health

17
CDC Public Health Bioterrorism Preparedness and
Response Grant
  • 24.6 million
  • Six Focus Areas
  • Planning
  • Surveillance and Epidemiology
  • Biological Laboratory Capacity
  • Health Alert Network System
  • Public Information and Risk Communication
  • Training

18
Los Angeles County Department of Health
ServicesBioterrorism Response
Jonathan E. Fielding, M.D., M.P.H. Director and
Health Officer John F. Schunhoff, Ph.D. Chief of
Operations -Surveillance -Bioterrorism -Community
-wide Disease Reporting -Health Community
Communications -Laboratory -Quarantine -Mass
Immunization Prophylaxis -Smallpox Plan
Virginia Price Hastings Director John Celentano,
M.D. Chief of Operations -Operational
Medicine/Departmental -Disaster
Coordination -Security -NPS Plan -Hospital
Preparation for PPE/Decon Education/Training for
Hospitals, First Responders Force Protection and
Others -MMRS -DMAT and NMRT-West
Teams -Coordination with Fire, Law and State and
Federal Government
19
Assessment and Planning
  • Assess existing public health preparedness
    status, including legal preparedness.
  • Prepare Countywide response plan.
  • Complete Regional response plan.
  • Plan and implement exercises to test all aspects
    of response plans.
  • Develop plan for National Pharmaceutical
    Stockpile use.

20
Surveillance and Epidemiology
  • Enhanced electronic disease surveillance
  • Integrated Data Repository
  • Establish and exercise mass prophylaxis plans
  • Develop Epi Rapid Response Teams

21
Enhanced Surveillance Activities
  • Surveillance for influenza (data collected by
    state)
  • ACD-Coroner Project
  • Collaborating with the Office of the Coroner to
    monitor unexplained deaths
  • Provides data on all non-trauma coroners cases
    to monitor for possible infectious causes.
  • Animal illness/death surveillance (web-based)
  • ED Syndromic Surveillance
  • ReddiNet CDC grant to explore adaptation for
    surveillance needs
  • ED syndromic surveillance and rapid reporting
    pilot in 4 hospitals

22
Laboratory Capacity
  • Increase ability for rapid testing and
    identification of biological agents.
  • Train local labs for bioterrorism preparedness.
  • Increase availability of lab staff trained for
    bioterrorism.
  • Relocate and renovate lab.

23
Communications and Technology
  • Develop systems for secure electronic exchange of
    public health information.
  • Create mechanisms for broadcast messages and
    alert notifications.
  • Improve communications technology pagers,
    radios, satellite phones.

24
Health Information and Risk Communications
  • Develop public health bioterrorism messages for
    pre and post event use.
  • Prepare materials in multiple languages.
  • Train departmental spokespersons.

25
Education and Training
  • Assess public and staff needs for education on
    bioterrorism.
  • Develop courses and curricula for bioterrorism
    preparedness.
  • Develop partnerships with community stakeholders
    to disseminate information.
  • Test effectiveness of educational programs and
    revise.

26
Providing Information to the Public
  • Bioterrorism website www.labt.org
  • 52,800 hits in since October 1, 2001
  • Health Info Line
  • Over 1,200 calls in October and November
  • 55 related to anthrax
  • Community Presentations
  • Over 200 since September 11, 2001
  • Brochures
  • Over 35,000 distributed

27
END
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