Health Care Ethics and Bioterrorism 20 April 2004 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Health Care Ethics and Bioterrorism 20 April 2004

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Director, Program in Law, Science, and Public Health ... Avian Flu. West Nile. Who knows what else? What if there is an outbreak? Do you keep the ER open? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health Care Ethics and Bioterrorism 20 April 2004


1
Health Care Ethics and Bioterrorism20 April 2004
  • Edward P. Richards
  • Director, Program in Law, Science, and Public
    Health
  • Louisiana State University Law Center
  • http//biotech.law.lsu.edu

2
Scenario One
  • 12 year old girl in the ER
  • Fever
  • Unusual rash with some sores
  • Sick, but not serious
  • What should you worry about?
  • What do you do?
  • Who do you call?

3
Ethical Issues
  • You are worried, but you do not know what you are
    dealing with
  • What are the issues?

4
More info
  • State lab says it is not smallpox
  • Looks like another pox, probably monkey pox
  • Contagious, but not as serious as smallpox
  • Only protection is smallpox vaccine
  • What do you do now?

5
What would have happened if it had been smallpox?
6
Why Smallpox Bioterrorism?
  • Stable aerosol Virus
  • Easy to Produce
  • Infectious at low doses
  • Human to human transmission
  • 10 to 12 day incubation period
  • High mortality rate (30)
  • CDC Materials

7
Herd Immunity Key to Eradication
  • Smallpox Spreads to the Non-immune
  • Immunization Slows the Spread Dramatically
  • Epidemics Die Out Naturally
  • Herd Immunity Protects the Unimmunized
  • You do not need 100 to end an epidemic

8
Small Pox Vaccine History
  • 1000 AD - China, deliberate inoculation of
    smallpox into skin or nares resulting in less
    severe smallpox infection. Vaccinees could still
    transmit smallpox
  • 1796 - Edward Jenner demonstrated that skin
    inoculation of cowpox virus provided protection
    against smallpox infection
  • 1805 - Italy, first use of smallpox vaccine
    manufactured on calf flank
  • 1864 - Widespread recognition of utility of calf
    flank smallpox vaccine
  • CDC Materials

9
Small Pox Vaccine History
  • 1940s - Development of commercial process for
    freeze-dried vaccine production (Collier)
  • 1950 - Pan American Sanitary Organization
    initiated hemisphere-wide eradication program

10
Global Eradication Program
  • 1967 - Following USSR proposal (1958) WHO
    initiated Global Eradication Program
  • Based on Ring Immunization
  • Vaccinate All Contacts and their Contacts
  • Isolate 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
  • CDC Materials

11
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12
Smallpox Vaccine
  • Live Virus Vaccine (Vaccinia Virus)
  • Not Cowpox, Might be Extinct Horsepox
  • Must be Infected to be Immune
  • Crude Preparation We Have Now
  • Prepared from the skin of infected calves
  • Filtered, Cleaned (some), and Freeze-dried
  • New Vaccine is Clean, but still Live
  • Just failed the clinical trials

13
Complications of Vaccination
  • Local Lesion
  • Can be Spread on the Body and to Others
  • Progressive (Disseminated) Vaccina
  • Deadly Like Smallpox, but Less Contagious

14
Historic 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

15
What 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?

16
Eradication Ended Vaccinations
  • Cost Benefit Analysis
  • Vaccine was Very Cheap
  • Program Administration was Expensive
  • Risks of Vaccine Were Seen as Outweighing
    Benefits
  • Stopped in the 1970s
  • Immunity Declines with Time

17
Universal Vulnerability
  • Agriculture and Smallpox
  • Stays Endemic or Dies Out Forever
  • Most Communities had Significant Immunity
  • Isolated Communities
  • Synchronous Infection
  • Break Down of Social Order
  • Now the Whole World is Susceptible

18
Why have the Have Risks of Vaccination 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

19
How have Attitudes toward Risk Changed?
  • How have our attitudes about risk changed?
  • How has this affected vaccinations?
  • What has caused this change?

20
Role of Medical Care
  • Smallpox
  • Can Reduce Mortality with Medical Care
  • Huge Risk of Spreading Infection to Others
  • Very Sick Patients - Lots of Resources
  • Cannot Treat Mass Casualties
  • Vaccinia
  • VIG - more will have to be made
  • Less sick patients - longer time

21
Hypothetical 2004 Outbreak
22
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

23
What are the Choices?
  • Isolation and Contact Tracing
  • Ring Immunization
  • Mass Immunization
  • What would you do?
  • What if you guess wrong?

24
Is Quarantine a Realistic Option?
  • Proper Isolation
  • Negative Pressure Isolation Rooms
  • Very Few
  • Hospitals and Motels
  • No Respiratory Isolation is Possible
  • One Case Infects the Rest

25
House Arrest
  • Need to provide income support
  • Food
  • Medical Care
  • Emotional Support
  • If many people resist, it is impossible to enforce

26
The Costs of Mass 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

27
What are the Ethical and Political Issues?
  • Vaccinate early
  • Stop the epidemic but with lots of complications
  • Wait until you are sure
  • Lots more deaths

28
Pre-Outbreak Immunizations
  • Can We Control who Gets the Vaccine?
  • Introduces a Disease into the Community
  • Can Spread Person to Person
  • Black-market Vaccine
  • Inoculation from Vaccinated Persons

29
Smallpox as a Threat
  • What should we do based on what we know now?
  • What if we knew terrorists had the virus?
  • What if there has been an outbreak in the
    mideast?
  • What if there is an outbreak in NYC?
  • What there are a few cases, but it is controlled?

30
Other Agents
  • Anthrax
  • Not contagious
  • Can be treated with antibiotics, but it is better
    to start within 12 hours of exposure
  • There is a vaccine
  • Plague, tularemia
  • Contagious
  • Potential agents
  • Treatable with antibiotics unless bioengineered

31
Natures Own
  • Flu
  • SARS
  • HIV and related agents
  • Ebola
  • Avian Flu
  • West Nile
  • Who knows what else?

32
What if there is an outbreak?
  • Do you keep the ER open?
  • What if you people are afraid to treat patients?
  • Do you admit potentially infected patients?
  • What are the risks?
  • Who pays for the costs to the hospital?
  • What if there is not enough vaccine or
    antibiotics to go around?

33
The Ethics of Plans
  • Is it ethical to make plans that cannot be
    implemented?
  • Is there a duty to speak up and say we are not
    ready?
  • What happens to health care workers and
    government employees who say the plans will not
    work?
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