Title: Smallpox, SARS, and Bioterrorism
1Smallpox, SARS, and Bioterrorism
- Lessons Learned and Future Challenges
- http//biotech.law.lsu.edu/cphl/Talks.htm
2Edward P. Richards
- Edward P. Richards
- Director, Program in Law, Science, and Public
Health - Harvey A. Peltier Professor of Law
- Paul M. Hebert Law Center
- Louisiana State University
- Baton Rouge, LA 70803-1000
- richards_at_lsu.edu
- http//biotech.law.lsu.edu
3Topics for Discussion
- Smallpox Vaccine Campaign
- SARS
- Bioterrorism Preparedness
- Questions throughout
4Why Smallpox Bioterrorism?
- Stable aerosol Virus
- Easy to Produce
- Infectious at low doses
- Human to human transmission
- 10 to 12 day incubation period
- Up to 30 Mortality rate
5Global Eradication Program
- 1967 - Following USSR proposal (1958) WHO
initiated Global Eradication Program - Based on Ring Immunization
- Vaccinate All Contacts and their Contacts
- Quarantine Contacts for Incubation Period
- Involuntary - Ignore Revisionist History
- 1977 - Oct. 26, 1977 last known naturally
occurring smallpox case recorded in Somalia - 1980 - WHO announced world-wide eradication
6(No Transcript)
7Smallpox in the US
- Last Cases in 1947
- Routine vaccinations ended in the early 1970s
- About 50 of persons have not been vaccinated
- Vaccine effectiveness declines with time
8Why did We Stop Immunizing?
- Cost Benefit Analysis
- Vaccine was Very Cheap
- Program Administration was Expensive
- Risks of Vaccine Were Seen as Outweighing
Benefits - Products Liability was Invented
9Problems of a Naïve Population
- Disease Equilibrium
- Recurring diseases that produce immunity leave
most of the population immune - Mostly affect children
- Epidemics are deadly but not destabilizing
- Naïve Populations
- Everybody gets sick about the same time
- Destabilizes - look at indigenous tribes
10How Fast Does Smallpox Spread?
- Do you have to mass vaccinate?
11Traditional Model
- Assumptions
- Most people are susceptible
- Significant mixing in urban areas
- Fairly efficient transmission
- Fast regional and then national and international
spread - Synchronous infection will shut down society
- Must use mass vaccination
12New Model (Used by CDC)
- Assumptions
- Vaccinated people are less susceptible
- Limited mixing in urban areas
- Inefficient transmission
- Slow Spread
- No destabilization
- Allows contact tracing and ring immunizations
13Why Not Vaccinate Everyone?
- Why roll the dice on which model is right?
14Smallpox Vaccine
- Live Virus Vaccine (Vaccinia Virus)
- Not Cowpox, Might be Extinct Horsepox
- Must be Infected to be Immune
- Crude Preparation We Have in Stock
- Prepared from the skin of infected calves
- Filtered, Cleaned (some), and Freeze-dried
- New Vaccine is Clean, but still Live
15Historic Probability of Injury
- Small Risk from Bacterial and Viral Contaminants
- Small Risk of Allergic Reaction
- 35 Years Ago
- 5.6M New and 8.6M Revaccinations a Year
- 9 deaths, 12 encephalitis/30-40 permanent
- Death or Severe Permanent Injury - 1/1,000,000
16Complications of Vaccination
- Local Lesion
- Can be Spread on the Body and to Others
- Progressive (Disseminated) Vaccina
- Deadly Like Smallpox, but Less Contagious
17How Have Risks Changed?
- Immunosuppressed Persons Cannot Fight the Virus
and Develop Progressive Vaccinia - Immunosuppression Was Rare in 1970
- Immunosuppression is More Common
- HIV, Cancer Chemotherapy, Arthritis Drugs, Organ
Transplants
18What Happened Last time - 1947 New York Outbreak
- Case from Mexico
- 6,300,000 Vaccinated in a Month
- 3 Deaths from the Smallpox
- 6 Deaths from the Vaccine
- Would Have Been Much Higher Without Vaccination
19Hypothetical 2003 Outbreak
- Smallpox is Spread by Terrorists in NY City
- 100 People are Infected
- They ride the Subway, Shop in a Mall, Work and
Live in Different High Rise Buildings - What are the Choices?
- Isolation and Contact Tracing
- Ring Immunization
- Mass Immunization
- What Would the Public Demand?
20Mass Immunization
- Assume 1,000,000 Vaccinated in Mass Campaign with
No Screening - Assume 1.0 Immunosuppressed
- 10,000 Immunosuppressed Persons
- Probably Low, Could be 2
- Potentially 1-2,000 Deaths and More With Severe
Illness
21Role of Medical Care
- Smallpox
- Can Reduce Mortality with Medical Care
- Huge Risk of Spreading Infection to Others
- Very Sick Patients - Lots of Resources
- Mass Casualties Swamp the System
- Vaccinia
- VIG - more will have to be made
- Fewer patients - longer time
22What Does Isolation Mean?
- Proper Isolation
- Negative Pressure Isolation Rooms
- Very Few
- Hospitals and Motels
- No Respiratory Isolation is Possible for more
than a few cases - One Case Infects the Rest
- House Arrest
- Impossible to Enforce
- How do they get Food and Medical Care?
23Smallpox Vaccination Campaign
24Why Did White House Wait so Long?
- Key year for bioterrorism 1993
- Credible information that the Soviet Union had
tons of smallpox virus it could not account for - CIA did not tell CDC
- Still Debating Destruction of the Virus in 1999
- Should have started on a new vaccine
- Should have worked out a vaccination program
25Vaccinating the Military
- Required of Combat Ready Troops
- Combat ready personnel are medically screened and
discharged if they have conditions that would
complicate vaccination - All are young and healthy
- Not a good control group
26Vaccinating Health Care Workers
- All ages
- Many have chronic diseases that compromise the
immune system or otherwise predispose to
complications - Have not been medically screened
- ADA makes medical screening legally questionable
- Political concerns make it impossible
27CDC Plan
- Voluntary vaccinations
- No screening or medical records review
- Self-deferral
28Problems in the CDC Plan
- Conflicting information on removing vaccinated
workers from the workplace - No focus on who should be vaccinated - random
volunteers do not produce a coherent emergency
team - Assumed patients would walk into the hospital
- Ignored Securing ERs to prevent this
- No attention paid to hospital and worker concerns
29Liability for Primary Vaccine Injuries
- Informed Consent
- Was the Patient Warned of the Risk?
- Is it 1/1,000,000 or is it 1/10 for the
Immunosuppressed? - Negligent Screening
- Is it reasonable to rely on self-screening when
the clinical trials demanded medical testing and
records review?
30Liability for Secondary Spread
- Spread to Family Members
- Is a Warning to the Vaccinee Enough?
- Should there be Investigation?
- Spread to Patients by Health Care Providers
- Should Vaccinated Persons be in the Workplace
while Healing? - Should Patients be Warned?
31Employment Discrimination Issues
- What Happens When Health Care Providers and
Others Refuse Vaccination? - What if they Cannot be Immunized?
- Must they be Removed from Emergency Preparedness
Teams? - What about Other Workplace Sanctions?
32Costs to Hospitals and Workers
- Is a vaccine injury a worker's compensation
injury? - Should be, but many comp carriers baulked at
assuring they would pay - Who pays for secondary spread injuries?
- Who pays for time off work and replacing workers?
- Does the worker have to take sick leave?
33Homeland Security Act Solution
- "For purposes of this section, and subject to
other provisions of this subsection, a covered
person shall be deemed to be an employee of the
Public Health Service with respect to liability
arising out of administration of a covered
countermeasure against smallpox to an individual
during the effective period of a declaration by
the Secretary under paragraph (2)(A)."
34What Triggers This?
- Secretary of HHS Must Make a Declaration
- Must Specify the Covered Actions
- Immunity Only Extends to Covered Use of Vaccine
- Does Not Apply to Unauthorized Use or Blackmarket
- Includes People and Institutions
35What is Excluded?
- Probably Workers Comp
- Not a Liability Claim
- If Included, then the Injured Worker has no
Compensation - Black-market and Direct Inoculation
- Only injuries, not costs of lost time and other
hospital costs
36Effect on Injured Workers, Their Families, and
Patients
- No compensation beyond comp
- Questions about whether comp would pay
- Might have to use vacation and sick leave
- Smallpox compensation act was eventually passed
but not implemented and is too limited
37The Real ProblemLack of Information
- What is the real risk of complications?
- Never clarified the risk to immunosuppressed
persons - Why now?
- Has something really changed?
- Is this just Swine Flu all over again?
38The End Result
- Less than 35,000 vaccinated out of a target of
500,000 - Many of those were reservists who were vaccinated
outside the hospital setting - Smallpox vaccination has been discredited
39The Problem
- Smallpox is still a real threat
- The CDC plans for dealing with an outbreak are
completely unrealistic - Should we start vaccinating the population?
- Vaccinating health care workers alone is not
epidemiologically sound or politically acceptable
40Lessons Learned
- There is a critical breakdown between national
security and public health information - Not surprisingly, the CDC must bow to political
pressure from the White House - State health departments do not have the
expertise or the political isolation to develop
independent approaches
41 SARS
42Spanish Influenza
- The prologue to Swine Flu and to SARS
- Global pandemic in 1918-1919
- May have killed 60,000,000 worldwide
- May have killed 600,000 in the US
- We do not know why it was so much more fatal
- This is why we overreacted to Swine Flu
43Critical Characteristics of SARS
- Virus related to the common cold
- Spreads by coughing and sneezing
- Harder to spread than a cold
- Much easier to spread than tuberculosis
- Exact odds of transmission are unknown
- Looks like other common diseases
- About 8 die despite aggressive treatment
44Hospitals as Vectors
- Hospitals and health care workers are often the
major vector for epidemic communicable diseases - Smallpox
- Ebola
- Now SARS
45Why are Hospitals Vectors?
- Concentrated susceptible populations
- Workers move between patients with few sanitary
precautions - Patients move around freely
- Hospitals make workers bear the cost of illness
so they do not go home
46SARS Control
- Identify the sick people
- Treat the sick people without infecting others
- Keep contacts of sick people at home for 10-14
days
47Problems for Hospitals
- How do you staff when you have to send people
home who have been exposed before the patient was
identified? - How do you keep people coming to work when they
get scared? - Who protects the facility from walk-ins?
- Do you sort in the parking lot?
48Financial and Legal Issues for Hospitals
- Who is going to pay the extra costs of care?
- Who is going to pay for replacing furloughed
staff? - Who picks up the comp costs?
- What about SARS-related lawsuits?
49Home Isolation
- Who pays people who have to stay home from work?
- Who brings them food?
- Who takes care of their medical needs?
- Who takes care of their psychological needs?
- If you ignore these, they will not stay home
50How is Toronto different from the US?
51Central Health Authority
- Nearly instant coordination of all docs and
hospitals - Ability to set uniform standards
- Ability to coordinate staffing
- Ability to control referrals and redirect
patients - Ability to shut down elective care and clear out
hospitals
52Much more extensive social service and public
health system
- People to do the things to make home isolation
work - Immediately set up a comp system
- No health insurance issues on payment
- Compliant Population
- No tort issues
- Few objections to isolation
53US Model
54Law and Plans are Cheap
- Lots of planning
- Plans never really address the impossibility of
carrying them out - Lots of special laws
- Poorly thought out
- Never come with staff or money to handle the
problems
55What Would Happen with an Outbreak?
- Would we limit transportation as was done in
Canada? - Would people really stay home?
- How would hospitals cope with a lot of critically
ill patients when they cannot handle the everyday
flow of patients? - None of the plans include putting everyone else
on the street
56Bioterrorism Issues
- Communicable diseases
- The SARS and Smallpox issues
- Anthrax
- This is the big worry of the national security
folks - Easier to manage because it is treatable and not
contagious - Hard because it could be a lot of people
57The General Problem
- Wholly inadequate public health system
- Not enough people with the right skills
- Not enough people to manage day to day problems
- Completely dysfunctional in many communities
- Lots of Plans, no resources
- Excess capacity or surge capacity?
58Lessons
59Just say No to Unworkable Plans
- The first step is honesty
- This is impossible for public health people
- Go along or be fired
- The ones that are left have learned the lesson
- Private Hospitals Must Take the Lead
60Quit Worrying about the Law
- No judge is going to stop disease control in a
crisis - Do not support detailed, confusing laws
- Stick with broad agency authority in a crisis
61Focus on Permanent Resources
- Emergency responses must build on day to day
operations if they are to work - If we cannot run an emergency care system, we
cannot respond to mass disasters - We need to talk about the trade off between
elimination of excess capacity and emergency
preparedness
62Demand Better Public Health
- Demand fully qualified public health
professionals - I do not know if there is a single
board-certified public health doc in the state
system - Epidemiologists have dropped 1/3 in 10 years to
about 1200 in the whole country - Provide political protection for public health
professionals - Separate Indigent Care and Environment from
Public Health