Title: Bioterrorism Awareness: Protection of Human and Animal Health
1Bioterrorism AwarenessProtection of Human and
Animal Health
- Food animal veterinarians
2Why Are We Here?
- September 11, 2001 changed many things
- Worst terrorist act in U.S. history
- More than 3000 presumed dead
- Occurred on American soil
- Increased sense of vulnerability
3Biological Attack
- Bioterrorism attacks of 2001
- Anthrax in postal system
- 22 cases
- 5 deaths
- U.S. public health realm changed forever
4Preparedness Responsibilities Veterinarians
- Anticipate outbreaks on the local level
- Collect and label samples
- Know the agents
- Know the typical signs of diseases
- Animals and human
- Know how to report suspected cases
- Disseminate knowledge
5Overview
- Bioterrorism
- Zoonoses and bioterrorism
- Disease control and biosecurity
- U.S. Government agencies involved
- Bioterrorism agents/diseases
- Your role and responsibility
6Terrorism
- Biological, chemical, or radiological agents
targeting agriculture or its components - Livestock
- Food supply
- Crops
- Industry
- Workers
- Conventional, radiological, nuclear,
chemical,cyber - Typically direct human targeting
Biological agents targeting humans, animals, or
plants
7Characteristics of a Biological Attack
- Difficult to detect release
- Dissemination may cover large area
- Possible secondary spread
- Recognition of agent may be delayed days to weeks
- Difficulties in catching perpetrator
8Infectious Disease Outbreak
Time (Days)
9Clues Suggesting Biological Agent Release
- Clustering of morbidity or mortality
- Temporally or geographically
- Large numbers of animals and/or people
- Atypical symptoms
- Normally healthy people affected
- Unusual symptoms for area
- Unusual age distribution
- Disease occurring outside typical season
10Many Agents are Zoonotic
- Disease may be seen in animals before humans
- Animals are sentinels
- Pets, livestock,
wildlife
11Factors That Promote Transmission of Zoonoses
- Frequent contact with domestic or wild animals
- Overlap with wildlife habitat
- Intensive livestock production
- Poor animal sanitation
- Poor personal hygiene
- Poor animal health
12Disease Control Client Education
- Disinfect/clean up areas contaminated with animal
waste - Livestock, pets, wildlife, rodents
- Basic hygiene
- Wash hands
- Child supervision
13Zoonoses ControlClient Education
- Proper pet selection
- Avoid petting zoos
- Cook food properly
- Control strays
- Communication with physician and veterinarian
- Follow guidelines for immunocompromised people
14Biosecurity Educationfor the Producer
- Develop and implement a biosecurity plan
- Train employees to help maintain the plan
- Post signs restricting access to areas of the
farm and control traffic flow
15Biosecurity Educationfor the Producer
- Regulate visitors
- Keep visitors sanitary
- Clean clothing, boots
- Disposable plastic
shoe/boot covers - Implement insect, bird, and animal control
- Secure water, feed and nutrient sources
16Biosecurity Educationfor the Producer
- Maintain healthy herd
- Vaccinate
- Proper hygiene for animals and handlers
- Purchase from reputable sources
- Quarantine newly purchased animals
- Separate sick animals
17Biosecurity Veterinarians
- Disinfect your clothes, boots, equipment between
farms - Avoid vehicle contamination
- Follow biosecurity guidelines set forth by
species specific associations
18U.S. Agencies
19Public Health Security and Bioterrorism
Preparedness Response Act of 2002
- June 12, 2002
- Improve ability of the U.S. to prevent, prepare
for, and respond to bioterrorism and other public
health emergencies - 4.3 billion
- 1.6 billion to state, local governments
- 300 million to CDC
- 1.15 billion to Secretary HHS
- 190 million for agriculture bioterrorism RD
- 160 million for water protection
20Department of Homeland Security
- Homeland Security Act of 2002
- Mission
- Prevent, protect, and respond to acts of
terrorism on U.S. soil - Four divisions
- Border and Transportation Security
- Emergency Preparedness and Response
- Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear
Countermeasures - Information Analysis and Infrastructure
Protection
21Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- CDC's Mission
- Promote health and quality of
life by preventing and
controlling disease, injury,
and disability - Preparing for bioterrorism since 1998
- One of first agencies to respond to anthrax
incidents
22Strategic National Stockpile
- 12-hour Push Package
- Complete package of medical materials
- Vendor Managed Inventory
- Tailored to suspected agents
23Insert Your States Info Here
24Preparing Iowa
- Iowas Homeland Security www.iowahomelandsecurity.
org - Administered by Iowa Emergency Management
Division - Preparedness, mitigation, response and recovery
- Works with public and private partners
- Detection, protection, and prevention
25Preparing Iowa
- Iowa Department of Public Health
www.idph.state.ia.us/odedp - Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land
Stewardship - Highly infectious animal disease program
- IRVIN Iowa Rapid Vet Info Network
- CFSPH training veterinarians to educate others
26Category ABC Agent Overview
27Classification
- Prepared by the CDCs Bioterrorism Preparedness
and Response Office - Category A highest priority
- Category B second highest priority
- Category C third highest priority
28Weaponization of Agents
- Alter characteristics of a pathogen to make it a
more effective weapon - Enhance transmission
- Increase virulence
- Resistant to antibiotics
- Evade vaccine protection
- Alter clinical signs
29Note to presenter
- As time allows select diseases you would like to
review. - If you have limited time you should focus on the
Category A agents. - The disease coverage is brief. If you would like
more information on a disease refer to the fact
sheet or to the disease specific presentation.
30Category A Agents/Diseases
- Anthrax
- Botulism
- Plague
- Smallpox
- Tularemia
- Viral Hemorrhagic fevers
31Anthrax The Agent
- Bacteria Bacillus anthracis
- Forms spores
- Human disease
- Skin
- Intestinal
- Inhalational
- Animal disease
- Septicemia and rapid death
32Anthrax The Bioweapon
- History
- Available easy to produce
- Spores infective
- Aerosolization
- Low lethal dose
- High mortality
- Person-to-person transmission rare
33Anthrax The Response
- Vaccine
- Humans
- Animals
- Antibiotics
- Treatment
- Prophylaxis
- Disinfection
- Sporicidal agents, sterilization
34Botulism The Agent
- Clostridium botulinum Gram pos, spore-forming
bacteria - 7 different neurotoxins
- Types A-G
- Clinical signs
- Flaccid paralysis
- Pigs, dogs, and cats fairly
resistant
35Botulism The Bioweapon
- Used by Aum Shinrikyo cult in Japan
- Aerosolized
- Easy to produce and transport
- Potent and lethal
- Most poisonous substance known
36Botulism The Response
- Toxoids for high risk people
- Antitoxin available
- Case-by-case basis
- Botulinum toxins are easily inactivated with many
disinfectants and heat
37Plague The Agent
- Yersinia pestis
- Gram neg, transmitted by fleabites, aerosol,
direct contact - Symptoms humans
- Bubonic, septicemia, pneumonic
- Symptoms animals
- Cat similar to human
- Dogs, livestock somewhat resistant
38Plague The Bioweapon
- WHO estimate
- 50kg agent city population 5 million
- 150,000 cases pneumonic plague
- Potential mortality 100,000
- Available
- Person-to-person transmission
- Pneumonic form 100 fatal if untreated
39Plague The Response
- Antibiotics generally effective if given early
- Killed vaccine available
- Isolation of sick individuals
- Susceptible to a number of common disinfectants
40Smallpox The Agent
- Variola virus, Orthopoxvirus
- Eradicated from the world in 1977
- Narrow host range humans only
- Transmission person-to-person, fomites
- Clinical signs
- Flu-like, progressive skin eruptions
41Smallpox The Bioweapon
- Disease signals a bioterrorism event
- Large scale production
- Aerosolization, susceptible population
- Person to person and fomite transmission
- Fatality approximately 35
42Smallpox The Response
- No specific treatment
- Vaccinia virus vaccination
- Vaccinia Immune Globulin
- Isolation of infected individuals
- Disinfection of environment, clothing etc. with
various chemicals, boiling or autoclaving.
43Tularemia The Agent
- Francisella tularensis
- Transmitted by ingestion, inhalation, vectors,
direct contact through skin - Six clinical forms in humans
44Tularemia The Agent
- Sheep, young pigs, horses, dogs, cats
- Sudden fever, lethargy, stiffness, prostration,
and death - Wildlife
- Usually find dead
- Rabbits behave strangely
- Cattle, older pigs resistant
45Tularemia The Bioweapon
- WHO estimation 1970
- 50 kg agent city population 5 million
- 250,000 ill
- 19,000 deaths
- Stable
- Aerosolized
- Low infective dose via inhalation
- Mortality 21-49 if untreated
46Tularemia The Response
- Person to person transmission not documented
- Antibiotics effective if early or prophylactic
- Vaccine
- For high risk individuals
- Unknown efficacy
- against inhalation
- tularemia
47Viral Hemorrhagic FeversThe Agents
- Ebola, Marburg, Lassa, and Machupo
- Human clinical presentation
- Early fever, fatigue
- Severe bleed from internal organs, body orifices
- Progression to shock seizures
- Animals only non-human primates susceptible
Vincent Massey
48VHF The Bioweapons
- Aerosolized
- Not readily available, require specialized
production - Person-to-person and nosocomial transmission
occur - Untreated fatality rate estimated to be 50-90
49VHF The Response
- Intensive supportive care
- Ribavirin has shown some efficacy
- Susceptible to bleach solutions, phenolic
disinfectants, and UV light
50Category B Agents/Diseases
- Brucellosis
- Glanders
- Melioidosis
- Psittacosis
- Q Fever
- Typhus fever
- Viral encephalitis
- Toxins
- Food Safety Threats
- Water Safety Threats
51Brucellosis The Agent
- Gram negative bacteria
- Ingestion, inhalation, or direct contact
- Clinical signs
- Humans cyclic fever and flu-like symptoms
- Animals reproductive signs
52Brucellosis The Agent
53Brucellosis The Bioweapon
- History
- Aerosolization, highly infectious
- Stable when lyophilized
- Case fatality rate 0.5
- Person to person unlikely
- Incubation is variable making diagnosis difficult
54Brucellosis The Response
- Long term antibiotics generally effective
- Vaccinate calves, no human vaccine
- Eliminate reservoir
- Standard precaution to avoid
exposure - Thorough disinfection
55Glanders The Agent
- Burkholderia mallei Gram negative
- Transmission by ingestion,
inhalation, or direct contact - Animal-to-human transmission is
inefficient - Clinical signs
- Humans horses cutaneous pulmonary lesions,
rapidly fatal illness
56Glanders The Bioweapon
- History
- WWI Russian horses
- WWII Chinese civilians, horses, POWs
- Easy to reproduce, lyophilized
- Aerosolized, highly infectious
- Mortality high in chronic form
- 50-70
- Person to person transmission - rare
57Glanders The Response
- No vaccine
- Antibiotic therapy likely effective
- Destroyed by various chemicals
58Melioidosis The Agent
- Burkholderia pseudomallei Gram negative
- Transmission contact, ingestion, inhalation
- Clinical signs humans, sheep, goats, and pigs
- Asymptomatic to pneumonia, lung wound
abscesses
59Melioidosis The Bioweapon
- Easy to produce
- Available
- Aerosolization
- Mortality high 90
- Person-to-person transmission unlikely
60Melioidosis The Response
- Long term, multiple antibiotics effective
- Vaccines available not in U.S.
- Easily destroyed by disinfectants
61Psittacosis The Agent
- Chlamydophila psittaci
- Occurs worldwide
- Reportable in U.S.
- Clinical disease
- Humans and birds ranges from asymptomatic to
systemic illness with severe pneumonia
62Psittacosis The Bioweapon
- Easily obtained
- Aerosolized
- Stable in the environment
- Person-to-person transmission rare
- Low mortality
63Psittacosis The Response
- Antibiotics generally effective
- Decontamination with most disinfectants
64Q Fever The Agent
- Coxiella burnetii
- Transmission inhalation, direct
contact, ingestion, ticks - Disease symptoms
- Humans
- Acute flu-like pneumonia hepatitis
- Chronic endocarditis, osteomyelitis
- Animals most asymptomatic
- Sheep, cattle and goats abortions
65Q Fever The Bioweapon
- History
- Easily accessible, resistant
- Highly infectious
- Aerosolization
- Low mortality
66Q Fever The Response
- Antibiotic therapy may limit complications
- Vaccine developed, not available in U.S.
- Variable susceptibility to disinfectants
67Typhus Fever The Agent
- Rickettsia prowazekii a rickettsial organism
- Endemic in Eastern Europe, Middle East, and parts
of Africa
- Transmitted by excreta of human body louse
- Clinical signs humans
- Fever, headache, macular eruptions, and petechial
rash - Not seen in domestic animals
J. Kalisch
68Typhus Fever The Bioweapon
- WHO estimation 1970
- 50 kg agent 5 million people in city
- 125,000 ill
- 8,000 deaths
- Available
- Can be aerosolized in
lice feces
U.S. Typhus Commission
69Typhus Fever The Response
- Antibiotics are generally effective
- Vaccine, not commercially available
70Viral Encephalitis The Agent
- The alphaviruses EEE, WEE, and VEE
- Transmitted via mosquito
- Clinical signs
- Birds are asymptomatic carriers, act as sentinels
- Humans, horses, donkeys, mules often
asymptomatic to flu-like - Encephalitis in small proportions
71Viral EncephalitisThe Bioweapon
- Easy to produce
- Aerosolization
- High rate of infection
- Person-to-person transmission possible
72Viral EncephalitisThe Response
- Supportive care
- Vaccine
- Equine
- Human high risk
- Virus unstable in environment
73Toxins The Agents
- Staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB)
- Ricin toxin from castor plant
- Clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin
74SEB The Agent
- Staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB)
- A common cause of food poisoning
- Clinical signs humans
- Fever, chills, headache, myalgia
- Non-productive cough if inhaled
- GI signs if swallowed
- Animals likely similar to human
75Ricin The Agent
- Ricin toxin from bean of castor plant
- Available worldwide
- Clinical signs
- Acute onset of fever,
- chest tightness, cough,
- dyspnea, nausea
76Epsilon Toxin The Agent
- Clostridium perfringens type B and D
- Increases intestinal and vascular permeability,
and liver damage - Clinical signs
- Calves diarrhea, abdominal pain, listlessness,
neurologic - Sheep, goats watery to bloody diarrhea,
neurologic - Humans little information
77Toxins The Bioweapon
- History
- Aerosolized SEB, Ricin
- Available worldwide
- Easy to produce, stable
- Many species affected
- No person-to-person transmission
78Toxins The Response
- Supportive
- No vaccines currently available for SEB or Ricin
- Vaccines for animals for clostridial disease
- Toxins are inactivated with common disinfectants
79Food Safety Threats
- Campylobacter species
- Salmonella species
- E. coli 0157H7
- Viruses, parasites, chemicals, toxins
- Ingestion of contaminated food
- Gastrointestinal upset
80Food Safety Threats The Bioweapon
- 1984, The Dalles, Oregon
- Bagwan Shree Rajneesh cult
- Contaminated salad bars
- Salmonella typhimurium
- Goal incapacitate voters
- 751 people ill
81Food Safety Threats The Response
- Constant vigilance to improve food safety
- Food irradiation at processing plants
- Wash hands and utensils frequently
- Proper cooking temperature and storage
82Water Safety Threats
- 53 of US drinking water is from ground water
- Cryptosporidium parvum- protozoa
- Vibrio cholerae- bacteria
83Cryptosporidium The Agent
- Cryptosporidium parvum- protozoa
- Transmission inhalation, ingestion
- Clinical signs humans, calves, others
- Acute gastroenteritis
- Dogs, cats, horses, pigs resistant
84Vibrio cholerae The Agent
- Vibrio cholerae- Gram negative bacteria
- Transmission fecal-oral, contaminated shellfish
- Clinical signs, humans
- Acute, mild diarrhea
- 5 severe disease
- Animals are resistant to disease
85Water Safety Public Health Significance
- 1993 Municipal water supply contaminated in
Milwaukee - Cryptosporidum parvum
- 40,000 ill
- 1997 Decorative water fountain at the Minnesota
Zoo - 369 cases
- Mostly young children
86Water Safety Threats The Response
- Government has laws to protect our water supply
- Treatment facilities are equipped and will likely
inactivate most organisms
- Chlorination, filtration, ozone
- Dilution factor
87Category C
88Nipah Virus The Agent
- Paramyxovirus
- Fruit bats
- Clinical signs
- Humans encephalitis
- Pigs respiratory neurological
- Dogs and cats distemper
89Nipah Virus The Bioweapon
- Aerosolization potential
- Wide host range
- No person to person transmission expected
- High morbidity and mortality
90Nipah Virus The Response
- Avoid contact with all infected animals and
fluids - Vaccine undergoing research
- Call authorities immediately
91Hantavirus The Agent
- Bunyaviridae family
- Asymptomatic reservoir rodents
- Transmission inhalation, ingestion, direct
contact - Human clinical signs
- Fever, myalgia, headache
- Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome
- Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome
- Not seen in domestic animals
92Hantavirus The Bioweapon
- Aerosolized
- Hospitalization
- Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome not the
clinical form expected in U.S.
93Hantavirus The Response
- Supportive care
- Limit exposure to rodent excrement
- Virus is deactivated with bleach
94Other Important Diseases
- Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy
- Rift Valley Fever
- Hendra Virus
- West Nile Virus
- Foot and Mouth Disease
95Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy The Agent
- Prions
- Proteinaceous infectious particles
- Mutated proteins
- Very long incubation period
- Neurological signs in all species
- No treatment available
96Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
- Mad cow disease
- Incubation 2 to 8 years
- 1995, United Kingdom
- vCJD
- People exposed to BSE
- Before bovine offal ban in 1989
- Active U.S. surveillance
- No reported cases
97TSE The Response
- Very resistant
- Heat, sterilization and disinfectants
- Early identification not possible
- Lack of host immune response
- Long incubation period
- No effective treatment or vaccine
- Surveillance program
- Import restrictions
98Rift Valley Fever The Agent
- Phlebovirus in family Bunyaviridae
- Transmission mosquito, inhalation, contact with
infected body fluids - Clinical signs
- Humans flu-like, fever, headache
- Severe disease retinitis, hemorrhagic
fever - Animals abortions, death in neonates
99Rift Valley Fever The Bioweapon
- WHO estimate 1970
- 50 kg of virus aerosolized
- 35,000 incapacitated
- 400 deaths (1 mortality)
- Stable at most temperatures
- Inactivated by various chemicals
100Rift Valley Fever The Response
- Vaccinate ruminants in endemic areas
- Control mosquitoes
- Avoid contact with infected tissues blood
- Wear protective clothing
- No person-to-person transmission
101Hendra Virus The Agent
- Newly discovered
- Australia
- Fruit bats
- Transmission urine, body fluids
- Incubation 6-18 days
- Humans
- Flu-like illness, respiratory failure
- Horses, cats
- Acute respiratory signs, nasal discharge, fever,
encephalitis, sudden death
102Hendra Virus The Response
- Little is known about disease
- Biolevel-4
- Potentially serious consequences
- High mortality rate
- Lack of treatment
103West Nile Virus The Agent
- Flavivirus
- Transmission
- Mosquitoes Culex species
- Blood transfusion, organ donation, breast feeding
- Animals Horses, birds, mammals, and reptiles
- Humans
- Duration 3-6 days
- 80 have no signs
- 20 develop West Nile Fever
104West Nile Virus Public Health Significance
- Human illness in US in 2002
- 4156 cases, 284 deaths
- Horses illness in US in 2002
- 14,717 cases
- 40 of ill result in death
- Method of introduction to U.S. unknown
- data current as of 5/28/03
105Map courtesy of CDC
106West Nile Virus The Response
- Treatment supportive care
- Vaccine available for horses, not humans
- Source elimination
- Eliminate larval habitats
- Personal protection
- Reduce time outdoors
- Wear long pants and sleeves
- Use mosquito repellent
107Foot and Mouth Disease FMD
- Picornavirus
- Transmission direct contact, aerosol, fomites
- Species cloven-hooved animals (not horses)
- Signs fever, vesicles, salivation, lameness
- Extremely rare, mild symptoms in people
108FMD Agroterrorism Threat
- Most important livestock disease in the world
- U.S. agriculture as a target
- One sixth of the U.S. domestic product is tied to
agriculture - Immunologically naive population
- Vulnerabilities
109FMD The Response
- USDA upgrading safeguarding measures
- Strict biosecurity
- Notify authorities immediately
- Response and recovery plans
- Quarantine
- Depopulation
- Disinfection
- Vaccination complex decision
110The Veterinarians Responsibility
111Opportunities for the Veterinary Profession
- Integrate into the public health system
- Be aware, contribute, assist in development of
surveillance programs - Report trends in disease and clinical signs
- Be involved with emergency response plans at all
levels
112The Veterinarians Responsibility
- Guardian of animal and public health
- Sharpen awareness of potential bioterrorism
- Alert officials early
- You are the expert
- Provide leadership and input to clients and
community
113What to do if bioterrorism is suspected
- Stay informed and remain calm
- Response is event specific
- Response is everyone's responsibility
- Follow the advice of public health officials
- Follow federal and state guidelines
- Movement restrictions may be necessary
114Contacts
- Phone numbers to know
- State Veterinarian
- State Public Health Veterinarian
- APHIS- Area Veterinarian in Charge
- Public Health Officials
115Summary
- Bioterrorism is a real threat
- Public health infrastructure is being
strengthened - Many bioterrorism agents are zoonotic.
- Awareness education is important component of
preparedness and protection
116Summary
- Prevention, recognition, and response involves
everyone - Report any suspicious activity, unexplained
behavior or death loss in your clients herd or
flock - You play a critical role
117Conclusion
- The best prescription,
- is knowledge.
- Dr. C. Everett Koop
- Former U.S. Surgeon General
118Acknowledgments
- Development of this presentation was funded by a
grant from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention to the Center for Food Security and
Public Health at Iowa State University.
Authors Danelle Bickett-Weddle, DVM Jamie
Snow, DVM Reviewers Radford G. Davis, DVM, MPH
Gayle B. Brown, DVM, PhD