Title: INFLUENZA PANDEMIC RESPONSE PLAN:
1INFLUENZA PANDEMIC RESPONSE PLAN PRIMARYCARE
RESPONSE FRAMEWORK
LIM KOK PENG Deputy Dir Ops Control ORC Div, MOH
2SCOPE
- Overview of the National Pandemic Response Plan
- Primary Care Response Framework
- Conclusion
3Human cases of Influenza A (H5N1)
- Cumulative total of 369 cases and 234 deaths (63
case fatality) as at 28 Feb 2008. - 2003 4 cases (4 deaths) 100
- 2004 46 cases (32) 70
- 2005 98 cases (43) 44
- 2006 115 cases (79) 69
- 2007 86 cases (59) 69
- 2008 20 cases (17) 85
4Pandemic Planning Assumptions
- Two or more waves in same year or in successive
flu seasons - Second wave may occur 3-9 mths later may be more
serious than first (seen in 1918) - Each wave lasts about 6 weeks
5Estimates of Local Pandemic Cases(US CDC Flu Aid)
- Attack rate of 25
- 450,000 do not need care
- 550,000 outpatients (ave abt 13,000 per day)
- 11,000 hospitalised
- 1,900 deaths
NB Use of anti-virals can reduce the
hospitalised popn by about 50.
6Strategy
- Surveillance for early
- detection
- Ring fence early cases
- Rapid response to mitigate
- consequences of 1st wave
- Vaccinate population as
- vaccine becomes available
Newsweek 31Oct 2005 Issue
7Surveillance
- Detect importation, occurrence, as early as
possible - External surveillance
- International Health Orgns (WHO, CDC, FAO etc)
- Country Health Authorities
- Internal surveillance
- Focus on hospitals
- Atypical pneumonias
- Unexplained deaths respiratory illness
- Laboratory
- Samples from sentinel clinics, TTSH, SGH, NUH,
KKH - Community Surveillance
- Polyclinics
- All GP Clinics (Dec 05)
- Veterinary Surveillance - AVA
8Response Impact Mitigation
- Minimise illness, deaths and overall
socio-economic impact - Treatment
- Contain spread
- Infection control measures
- Social distancing measures
- Maintain essential services
- Anti-viral prophylaxis
9Vaccination
- Obtain vaccines as soon as possible.
- Vaccinate entire population.
10Influenza Pandemic Response
- Colour-coded Risk Management approach
- Green Largely animal disease occasionally
infects humans (WHO Phase 1, 2, 3) - Yellow - inefficient human-to-human transmission
requiring close, sustained contact (WHO Phase 4) - Orange more efficient H to H transmission, but
still limited in certain settings (WHO Phase 5) - Red pandemic widespread infection (WHO Phase
6) - Black - high mortality, morbidity (WHO Phase 6)
- Past pandemics have moved from Green to Red
without transiting Yellow/Orange or just briefly
11Pre-Pandemic Response
- Green/Yellow/Orange Containment, Prevent Spread
- Effective surveillance to detect the importation
of cases with a novel influenza virus - Border control measures (e.g. temp screening)
- Containment through isolation of cases and
quarantine of contacts Tamiflu. - Outpatient clinic early detection of suspect
case, isolation, notification of MOH and tpt to
RH for confirmation treatment
12Pandemic Response
- Pandemic Red/Black Mitigate impact of 1st
wave - Whole of Govt
- Maintain essential services Tamiflu
prophylaxis. - Social distancing may have to be considered
depending on severity. e.g. close schools, child
care centres, ban public gatherings (e.g.
cinemas, concerts) - Strong public communications.
13Pandemic Response - Healthcare
- Pandemic Red/Black Mitigate impact of 1st
wave - Organize healthcare system to deliver care
effectively - Outpatient management Primary Care Framework
- Provide as many treatment facilities as possible
- Treat all with flu-like symptoms
- Separate system for non-flu patients
- Involve polyclinics and private primary care
clinics - Inpatient management (all hospitals)
- For severe cases only
- Manage flu and non-flu cases
- Prepare system for mass vaccination- vaccinate
when vaccines available
14- Threat of a Global Pandemic Continues to Loom!!
Do you intend to stay open? Continue to treat
your patients? Do you have a contingency plan?
Are you prepared?
15Primary Care Response Framework
Helping private clinics continue treating the
ill in the community
16Primary Care FrameworkWhy involve Private
Clinics ?
- Retain normal community services as much
possible - - Care remains in the heartlands and easily
accessible - Reduce surge on Polyclinic System
- - waiting time
- - overcrowding will facilitate spread
- Reduce need for ill to travel for medical care
thus limiting the spread of infection in
community - Family physician for every Singaporean
- - Partner the private family physicians who
handle some 80 of normal primary care visits - Primary outpatient care is a key strategy in
pandemic case mgt
17Primary Care FrameworkConcept
- Activated at Pandemic - DORSCON RED
- Maintain normalcy and accessibility of primary
care - Support the private clinics to enable them to
continue to manage the ill including pandemic flu - Cluster the clinics around Polyclinics for
coordination
18Maintain NormalcyEngaging the Private Clinics
- All on Board About 1400 private primary care
clinics (with about 2000 doctors) - Letters of Invitation sent to clinics (2006,
2007,2008) - Outreach Briefings carried out
- 2 Sessions (2006)
- Tie-up with large GP Groups
- Primary Care Workshops 2007
- 3 weekends July, Aug
- 2 weekends Feb, Mar 08
- Polyclinic dialogues/training FY 08 onwards
- About 60 on board, including the large GP
Practices - Inform the Public to identify closest clinic
- Continued effort to get participation from all
private clinics by MOH, SMA CFPS
19Support the Clinics
- Staff protection identical to public HCWs
- PPE (3 N95 masks, 4 gowns, 10 prs gloves)
- Anti-viral prophylaxis (40 caps/staff/6 wks)
- Surgical masks for patients (50/day)
- Anti-viral drugs for treatment of flu cases (abt
100/clinic/wk)
20Support the ClinicsLogistics Supply System
- Clinics encouraged to keep at least 1 week supply
PPE - DORSCON RED, clinics receive
- Staff PPE for 6 weeks
- Staff Anti-viral prophylaxis for 6 weeks
- Anti-viral treatment for 1 week
- Routine weekly resupply of anti-virals for
treatment - Feedback needed for
- N95 Mask Fit (Dr, 4 Staff)
21Support the Clinics
- Clustering around the Polyclinics for synergy and
coordination - Crowd Management and Security
- Public Communications MICA, MOH
- National Pandemic Readiness Response Plan
(www.moh.gov.sg) - Health Check System reporting case information
- Guide to Organising a Primary Care Clinic during
an Influenza Pandemic
22Support the ClinicsClustering Framework
- 18 Polyclinic as focal point Clusters based on
geographical location - Sub-clustering and appointing leaders for better
coordination - Large Group Practices form own cluster
23SUPPORT THE CLINICS CLUSTERING FRAMEWORK
MOH
SMA
CFPS
Large GP Practice Cluster
Polyclinic-GP Cluster HQ AMK Headed by Head
Polyclinic Dy Head Clinic Group 1 IC
x 18
Coord Section (only during pandemic) Co-staffed
by Polyclinic staff Clinic staff
3- tier
Clinic Group 1 Headed by 1x Group IC 1x Group
2IC
Clinic Group 1 Headed by 1x Group IC 1x Group
2IC
AMK Polyclinic Headed by Hd Polyclinic
24Clustering FrameworkRole of Polyclinic/Cluster
Heads
- Coordination and liaison
- Information dissemination in normalcy and in
crisis - Assist to reallocate manpower and other resources
within clusters/groups when required
25Support the ClinicsCrowd Management Security
- Expect larger than normal crowd at some clinics
- Likely to remain orderly policy of treatment to
all patients suggestive of flu - Clinics need to manage the larger numbers
efficiently and smoothly - SPF foot patrols around clusters
26Support the ClinicsPublic Communications
- Managed nationally by MICA and MOH
- Transparent and timely communication
- Educate raise awareness of disease, vigilance,
good hygiene, socially responsible behaviour - Build confidence, calm
- Support national response reduce load at
hospital EDs, rush for treatment, community-wide
measures
27Conclusion
- HPAI infections continue and number of human
cases growing Singapore cannot relax vigilance - Threat of a pandemic remains
- No one can predict when or how bad the next
pandemic is going to be - Basic National Plan is in place
- Public health system cannot cope with the
expected numbers of ill on its own - Need the entire healthcare system to work
together and function as a well oiled team
28Thank You
www.flu.gov.sg www.moh.gov.sg www.sma.org.sg
www.cfps.org.sg