Title: Pandemic Influenza A Business Impact Analysis
1Pandemic Influenza A Business Impact Analysis
RSM McGladrey, Inc. is a member firm of RSM
International an affiliation of separate and
independent legal entities.
2The only thing more difficult than pandemic
planning is going to be explaining why you did
not do it! -- Marja Esveld Healthcare
Inspectorate, Netherlands
3Pandemic A Slow Motion Train Wreck
- History tells that many times we have been
scourged by widespread infectious diseases, some
have been pushed back by Health Practices and
Medical Technologies, yet even then we see
periodic outbreaks on such a scale to be called
Pandemics. - Some variations cause what we term seasonal flu,
harvesting a quarter million souls, world wide.
Some variations pass almost unnoticed.
4Pandemic A Slow Motion Train Wreck
- Every once in a while a variety emerges that is a
monster, decimating the human race, as it did in
1918. - We are now faced with a strain of Avian
Influenza, H5N1 that has all the hallmarks of
making a significant impact on human history. - The straight truth is that we are no better
prepared than we were in 1918, and a whole lot
more vulnerable. The best we can do is prepare
for the worst and hope for the best. - We have nowhere to run!
5Impact on the Business Community
"All the other catastrophes we've had in the
world in recent years at the very most put screen
doors on our borders. This incident will shut a
six-inch steel door, Dr. Michael
Osterholm "You're just going to have to be
strong enough to keep your head down for a
year, Sir Richard Branson, Virgin Group
6We Are Overdue!
- Communicable disease experts predict that another
pandemic will occur although the timing and
pattern will be unpredictable - There is no way to prevent a pandemic from
occurring
7Pandemic Influenza What can we expect?
- High absenteeism
- Challenges getting to/from worksite
- Psychological impacts on workforce will be
extreme - Social distancing efforts may dramatically change
hours of operation or close businesses
temporarily - Economic losses small businesses at greatest
risk
8Pandemic Influenza What can we expect?
- A Pandemic of even moderate intensity will bring
the global business community to its knees
many business will never recover. - It will not be business as usual. The disruption
of global supply chains, loss of outsourced
supplies, development processes and
manufacturing the collapse of export markets
will be the downside of Globalization. - Every Wal-Mart store will be stripped clean in a
matter of weeks.
9Pandemic Influenza Reality Check
- Business Continuity Planning
- Very few have pandemic flu response plans in
place - Human Resources Management
- Generally no policies or plans addressing impact
of pandemic flu - Communications
- Need for accurate, consistent, up-to-date
information and a means to deliver it -
10(No Transcript)
11Preparing your Organization for a Pandemic
12Pulling It Together
In preparing for battle I have always found that
plans are useless, but planning is
indispensable Dwight D Eisenhower No plan
survives contact with the enemy Moltke
13Pandemic Incident Response Plan
- BCP/DR focuses on loss of FACILITY!
- Pandemic Incident Response Plan focuses on loss
of PEOPLE! - BCP/DR assumes adequate staff is available for
recovery - Pandemic Incident Response Plan assumes high
levels of employee absence - The buildings and computers are still working,
there just isnt any people to do the work!
14Pandemic Influenza Planning Assumptions
- 15 of the workforce is absent for 8 weeks
because school closures oblige working parents to
stay home and look after children. Note that this
proportion will vary according the particular
workforce. - 40 of those remaining at work become ill at some
time during the 8 weeks of the first pandemic
wave. - The workplace attack wave will mimic the pattern
that is expected in the general population. - Every person who becomes ill has a minimum of 7
shifts off work. - There is a 100 relational absence rate that
is, for every person in the remaining workforce
who gets ill, another will not come to work
because of the need to look after a sick spouse
or children, or a disinclination to travel or
work. - 3 of workers who become ill from pandemic
infection will die.
15The 5 step plan for Pandemic Incident Response
Planning
- Plan development stage Plan for it
- Monitoring stage Keep an eye on it
- Pre-Pandemic preparation stage React to it
- Pandemic stage Manage it
- Post Pandemic stage Recover from it
16The 5 step plan for Pandemic Incident Response
Planning
171 Plan Development Stage (Plan for it)
- Appoint a Divisional Representatives to report
conformity to policies. - Develop a means to actively communicate timely
information to all employees. - Continue to revise all continuity plans.
- Distribute information kits to all personnel.
- Develop secondary sources of supplies.
- Stockpile critical components/Accumulate cash
reserves. - Review and relax sick leave policies.
- Consider re-tasking existing resources as needed.
- Modify facilities/workplaces to comply to
recommendations. - Inform Stakeholders and management of progress.
- Maintain a policy of Robustness and Flexibility
in planning.
18The 5 step plan for Pandemic Incident Response
Planning
192 Monitoring Stage (Keep an eye on it)
- Division Representatives report conformity to
policies and suspected or confirmed infections. - Distribute gloves, masks and hand sanitizer to
workforce. - Begin recommended Work Force Policies.
- Operationalize Telecommuting.
- Secure Financial Resources.
- Monitor Supply Chains and Product/Service
Demands. - Keep workforce actively informed of progress.
- Review existing plans and modify to conform with
accumulated experience. - Notify State and Local Authorities of State of
Readiness.
20The 5 step plan for Pandemic Incident Response
Planning
213 Pre-Pandemic Preparation Stage (React
to it)
- Division Representatives report conformity to
policies and suspected or confirmed infections
daily. - Disperse workforce and maintain functionality
remotely. - Reduce facility workforce to essential functions.
- Provide support for displaced workforce.
- Adjust production to compensate for
displacements. - Collapse hierarchical management chains.
- Maintain close working relationships with
community leaders and State and Local Authorities.
22The 5 step plan for Pandemic Incident Response
Planning
234 Pandemic Stage (Manage it)
- Division Representatives report conformity to
policies and suspected or confirmed infections
daily. - Increase Facility Security.
- Begin Lockdown Procedures.
- Maintain Essential Internal Functions.
- Inform State and Local Authorities of Operational
Levels.
24The 5 step plan for Pandemic Incident Response
Planning
25Recovery!
Its Up to You!
26Essential Elements of Pandemic Planning
271.1 Plan for the impact of a pandemic on your
business
- Identify a pandemic coordinator and/or team with
defined roles and responsibilities for
preparedness and response planning. The planning
process should include input from labor
representatives. - Identify essential employees and other critical
inputs (e.g. raw materials, suppliers,
sub-contractor services/ products, and logistics)
required to maintain business operations by
location and function during a pandemic. - Train and prepare ancillary workforce (e.g.
contractors, employees in other job
titles/descriptions, retirees). - Develop and plan for scenarios likely to result
in an increase or decrease in demand for your
products and/or services during a pandemic (e.g.
effect of restriction on mass gatherings, need
for hygiene supplies).
28- Determine potential impact of a pandemic on
company business financials using multiple
possible scenarios that affect different product
lines and/or production sites. - Determine potential impact of a pandemic on
business-related domestic and international
travel (e.g. quarantines, border closures). - Find up-to-date, reliable pandemic information
from community public health, emergency
management, and other sources and make
sustainable links. - Establish an emergency communications plan and
revise periodically. This plan includes
identification of key contacts (with back-ups),
chain of communications (including suppliers and
customers), and processes for tracking and
communicating business and employee status. - Implement an exercise/drill to test your plan,
and revise periodically.
29"Without constant practice, the officers will be
nervous and undecided when mustering for battle
without constant practice, the general will be
wavering and irresolute when the crisis is at
hand. Sun Tzu The Art of War
301.2 Plan for the impact of a pandemic on your
employees and customers
- Forecast and allow for employee absences during a
pandemic due to factors such as personal illness,
family member illness, community containment
measures and quarantines, school and/or business
closures, and public transportation closures. - Implement guidelines to modify the frequency and
type of face-to-face contact (e.g. hand-shaking,
seating in meetings, office layout, shared
workstations) among employees and between
employees and customers (refer to CDC
recommendations). - Encourage and track annual influenza vaccination
for employees.
31- Evaluate employee access to and availability of
healthcare services during a pandemic, and
improve services as needed. - Evaluate employee access to and availability of
mental health and social services during a
pandemic, including corporate, community, and
faith-based resources, and improve services as
needed. - Identify employees and key customers with special
needs, and incorporate the requirements of such
persons into your preparedness plan.
321.3 Establish policies to be implemented during a
pandemic
- Establish policies for employee compensation and
sick-leave absences unique to a pandemic (e.g.
non-punitive, liberal leave), including policies
on when a previously ill person is no longer
infectious and can return to work after illness. - Establish policies for flexible worksite (e.g.
telecommuting) and flexible work hours (e.g.
staggered shifts). - Establish policies for preventing influenza
spread at the worksite (e.g. promoting
respiratory hygiene/ cough etiquette, and prompt
exclusion of people with influenza symptoms).
33- Establish policies for employees who have been
exposed to pandemic influenza, are suspected to
be ill, or become ill at the worksite (e.g.
infection control response, immediate mandatory
sick leave). - Establish policies for restricting travel to
affected geographic areas (consider both domestic
and international sites), evacuating employees
working in or near an affected area when an
outbreak begins, and guidance for employees
returning from affected areas (refer to CDC
travel recommendations). - Set up authorities, triggers, and procedures for
activating and terminating the companys response
plan, altering business operations (e.g. shutting
down operations in affected areas), and
transferring business knowledge to key employees.
341.4 Allocate resources to protect your employees
and customers during a pandemic
- Provide sufficient and accessible infection
control supplies (e.g. hand-hygiene products,
tissues and receptacles for their disposal) in
all business locations. - Enhance communications and information technology
infrastructures as needed to support employee
telecommuting and remote customer access. - Ensure availability of medical consultation and
advice for emergency response.
35- Provide information for the at-home care of ill
employees and family members. - Develop platforms (e.g. hotlines, dedicated
websites) for communicating pandemic status and
actions to employees, vendors, suppliers, and
customers inside and outside the worksite in a
consistent and timely way, including redundancies
in the emergency contact system. - Identify community sources for timely and
accurate pandemic information (domestic and
international) and resources for obtaining
counter-measures (e.g. vaccines and antivirals).
361.5 Communicate to and educate your employees
- Develop and disseminate programs and materials
covering pandemic fundamentals (e.g. signs and
symptoms of influenza, modes of transmission),
personal and family protection and response
strategies (e.g. hand hygiene, coughing/sneezing
etiquette, contingency plans). - Anticipate employee fear and anxiety, rumors and
misinformation and plan communications
accordingly. - Ensure that communications are culturally and
linguistically appropriate. - Disseminate information to employees about your
pandemic preparedness and response plan.
371.6 Coordinate with external organizations and
help your community
- Collaborate with insurers, health plans, and
major local healthcare facilities to share your
pandemic plans and understand their capabilities
and plans. - Collaborate with federal, state, and local public
health agencies and/or emergency responders to
participate in their planning processes, share
your pandemic plans, and understand their
capabilities and plans. - Collaborate with federal, state, and local public
health agencies and/or emergency responders to
participate in their planning processes, share
your pandemic plans, and understand their
capabilities and plans. - Share best practices with other businesses in
your communities, chambers of commerce, and
associations to improve community response
efforts.
38Are You Prepared?
- Essential services will be severely disrupted due
to absenteeism - Media and public scrutiny will be intense and
unrelenting - There will be NO OUTSIDE ASSISTANCE available!
- We will be facing this basically ALONE!
39The only thing more difficult than pandemic
planning is going to be explaining why you did
not do it! -- Marja Esveld Healthcare
Inspectorate, Netherlands
40RSM McGladrey, Inc. is a member firm of RSM
International an affiliation of separate and
independent legal entities.