Title: Preparing NGOs for Operations in High Risk Environments
1Preparing NGOs for Operations in High Risk
Environments ________________________ Personal
Protection and Staff Health Issues
2- Mark Stinson,MD
- AAFP, AAEP
- Associate Clinical Professor, UC Davis
-
- Emergency Response Team Leader
- RELIEF INTERNATIONAL
3Snapshot Survey of Current NGO Preparedness
- RI contacted 14 International NGOs in November
2002 to assess the current status of preparedness
and planning for CBRN events. The selection of
NGOs reflected a range of agencies, some less
likely than others to be involved in critical
phase emergency operations. - Of the 14 agencies eight (57) indicated that
they had no plans or preparations in place and an
additional four (29) did not respond. - Of the two (14) agencies who did respond
positively one indicated preparedness activities
were exclusively domestic focused and the other
had developed a limited capacity to decontaminate
people exposed to CBRN agents, although the
variety of agents was not indicated. - Data collected from January 2003 showed
significant change in plans and attitude.
Agencies polled ADRA, MSF, CARE, ARC, Baptist
World Aid, Doctors of the World, IMC, Oxfam, CCF,
DRI, Health Volunteers Overseas, Project Hope,
UMCOR.
4Snapshot Survey of Current NGO Preparedness
- Conclusion
- Evident lack of capacity at present, across a
spectrum of agencies. - Some lack of willingness to share information
between agencies. - Absence of common vision of appropriate skills,
equipment and level of acceptable risk for NGOs. - Desire to improve capacity
5NGO CBRNE Preparedness
- Past
- Limited prior experience in CBRNE type response
in humanitarian operations too much in military
operations, except for naturally occurring
infectious disease outbreaks, for example
cholera/lassa fever. - Evacuation only strategy
- Limited numbers of adequately trained staff,
equipment, procedural knowledge.
6History
- CBRNE Agents have been used on unprotected civil
populations on many occasions - Some of the locations where the local population
had no defense were - Ethiopia
- Iraq
- Afghanistan
- Laos
- Japan
7NGO CBRNE Preparedness
- Present
- Intent to operate in hazardous environments/Iraqi
theater in the event of a humanitarian crisis. - Recognition of need to develop adequate CBRNE
capacity to ensure staff safety as a minimum. - Application of public health strategies to CBRNE
response for protecting civilian populations.
8NGO CBRNE Preparedness
- Lack of clarity as to the focal points in
government and military for assistance and
technical support. - Training curriculum, identification of material
suppliers and related tasks now being developed
for RI staff and as a service to other agencies,
reflecting humanitarian priorities and modus
operandi a lot of other agencies are now JUST
BEGINNING to do this, but largely in silos.
9NGO CBRNE Preparedness
- Future
- Institutional capacity (material resources,
knowledge, experienced staff cadre, training of
new staff and procedures) developed for all
relevant country programs as part of SECURITY
PLAN. - Agencies are confident in assessing their
capacities to either protect own staff and
civilian population and/or continue to implement
emergency programs in contaminated environments. - Mainstreaming CBRN preparedness in public health
programming in all health related agencies to
protect civilian population. - Firm guidelines are established for all agencies
entering potentially hazardous theaters.
10Concrete Actions
- Choices Facing NGOs
- Capability to to protect staff and to safely
evacuate them. - Capability to continue a level of service for
those affected by the CBRNE event. - Prevention capability to protect civilian
populations from threats.
11Concrete Actions Threats / Difficulties
- Lack of quality training relevant to NGO
personnel, role and operational orientation. - Very rapid capacity development is required in
relation to the Iraq theater. - Adequate funding for relevant equipment and
supplies, for example large stockpiles of
appropriate for pre/post event prophylactic
vaccinations or other treatments (as recommended
by CDC,WHO). - Inadequate information on the exact nature of
CBRNE threats in a particular theater or early
warning of attacks. - Risk of over-estimating NGO capacity to provide
humanitarian assistance in response to a large
scale or prolonged CBRN event.
12Threats and Difficulties cont
- Expensive one use only personal protective
equipment - Staff concerns about risks of vaccination and
pretreatment - Potentially overly cautious military command
preventing personnel from serving population in
need - Extremely remote locations with no sophisticated
medical backup conflicting with Western medical
paradigm
13Concrete Actions
- Prevention
- Humanitarian personnel must be pretreated against
likely agents and antidotes for chemical agents
must be readily available - Military/NGO cooperation required for
preplanning/preparation/assessment of likely
threats maintaining neutrality at all cost - Utilization of UN/ Mil/ OFDA DART teams to
assist with risk assessment - Impossible to provide mass prophylaxis of
potential victims in the field prior to an event
14Training
- What do NGOs need to know?
- Range of threats in a particular theater,their
treatments and all necessary protective measures - Prophylactic immunization and pretreatment
recommendations - Mass casualty strategies
- Sources of technical assistance
- Supplies/knowledge of operation of all relevant
material and equipment - Fit testing all various types of PPE
15Training cont
- Improvisation knowledge for the unexpected
exposure use of rainsuits,ponchos, etc. - Construction of Safe Rooms/Shelter in Place
techniques - Civil - military liaison channels of
communication
16Training - Present
- Military Personnel Only Training
- Center of Excellence
- USAF/CDC/USPHS training - TEIR 1 2
- CBDCOM Domestic Preparedness Program
- Government/NGO Internal Training
- Domestic Disaster Preparedness/CBRNE training
courses available online. CBDCOM Disaster
preparedness Program, ANSER, Mosby, NDMS, FEMA,
etc. - Excellent reference material available from
numerous sources. - Virtual Naval Hospital, ATSDR, US Mil, CDC,
WHO, Chemtrac,USG,etc.
17Training- Future
- RI is currently developing training programs for
its staff utilizing material from TIER II
training - OFDA/INTERACTION training programs geared for the
NGO population soon to be implemented - Private for-profit training programs
- Joint military/civilian training
18Preparation of Threatened Populations
- Population likely to be affected must be given
information equipment supplies ahead of time
regarding - CBRNE Medical Diagnosis/Treatment protocols
- Practical personal protection strategies
- Decontamination techniques
- Evacuation strategies
- Quarantine requirements
- Long-term care provisions
19Diagnosis
- Diagnosis difficult given diseases have been seen
by few living clinicians - Abnormal presentations of classical diseases may
be present due to super infection - Diagnosis critical for epidemiological monitoring
- Accurate data required for potential future
prosecution of war crimes - Psychogenic overlay may cloud the diagnostic
process
20Treatment
- Protocols/operational guidelines must be
established which are available to all
individuals and organizations involved in a given
operation. - Experts must be available to guide operations in
a potentially rapidly changing environment. - USG/ NGO specially trained decontamination teams
should be utilized if available - Information must be shared in a
- rapid and reliable fashion Civil/Military/UN
21Treatment cont
- Preparation be made for unexpected threats
Moscow Theatre attack - Stockpiles of medication and equipment must be
repositioned in the area of operations - NGOs must have prearranged authority to access
stockpiles - Oxygen, intubation and prolonged respiratory
support may be required
22Mitigation- Post Event
- Well trained and disciplined NGO implementing
teams and indigenous partners. - Pre-positioned stockpiles of relevant material
for post event response/treatment plus adequate
training of indigenous health personnel. - Effective interagency coordination and
contingency planning for post event responses. - Mental health professionals
available for intervention/ counseling/training
of local health officials.
23Mitigation Post event cont
- Aid must be provided for long-term consequence
management - Field staff will require long-term monitoring of
health effects including psychological effects - Aid groups must be prepared to deal with possible
long-term disability issues with staff members
24WHO GuidanceCNBRE Agents of War
- Likely weaponized agents listed in upcoming WHO
publication - 17 Biological agents
- 16 Chemical agent
- Impossible to prepare for all inevitabilities but
possible to prepare for likely events
Public heath response to biological and chemical
weapons WHO guidance, 2nd edition
25Health Issues Related to the CBRNE Environment
- Chemical agents
- Biological agents
- Radiologic agents
- Nuclear agents
- Explosives- High Yield
26Chemical Agents
- Lung irritants - Phosgene,
- Blood agents - Hydrogen Cyanide, ..
- Vesicants - Mustard Gas,
- Nerve agents - Sarin, VX,
- Disabling agents
- Incapacitatants-LSD, Agent BZ,
- Harassing Agents- Adamsite, Agent CN
- Public health response to biological and
chemical weapons WHO guidance, 2nd edition
27Chemical AgentPrevention, Diagnosis and
Treatment
- Prevention - Avoidance/Personal Protective
Equipment/Evacuation. Pretreatment with antidotes
when possible - Type of agent must be determined and its
properties fully communicatedhow it was
dispersed, its duration of action, how weather
affects its properties, etc. - Diagnosis - Basic knowledge of characteristics of
various agents. Military intelligence. Specialty
consultation
28Chemical agents Treatment
- Decontamination - Large quantities of water or
whatever is available sand - Large quantities of personal protective equipment
required to conduct safety decontamination/treatme
nt - Treatment- Appropriate antidotes and supportive
care - Expensive treatment kits must be readily
available cyanide,MARK1,CANA, etc. - High-level medical care must be available after
initial first-aid
29Biological Agents
- Bacteria - Anthrax,
- Fungi - Coccidioidmycosis,
- Viruses - Smallpox,
- Toxins - Ricin, Botulism,
30Biological AgentPrevention, Diagnosis, Treatment
- Prevention - Vaccination when appropriate.
Pretreatment with antibiotics when appropriate - Early detection difficult without complicated and
expensive diagnostic equipment HRA, PCR, IR - Diagnosis - Basic knowledge of disease patterns
with ready access to specialty consultation.
Super infection may complicate diagnosis
31Biological agents Treatment cont
- Decontamination/quarantine - as needed
- Treatment - appropriate amount and type of
antibiotics post exposure vaccine, antitoxin,
etc and supportive care - Possibility of delayed infection/presentation
- Possibility of resistant strains
32Radiologic/Nuclear Agents
- Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Neutron radiation
- Depleted uranium from armor piercing shells
- Nuclear weapons
- Radioisotopes from dirty bombs/radiological
dispersal device - Radioisotopes from damage to nuclear power
plants, medical equipment, industrial equipment
33Radiologic/NuclearPrevention/Diagnosis/Treatment
- Prevention - Intelligence regarding possibility
of exposure to radiologic agents. Stockpiling of
iodine other postexposure agents if exposure
is likely - Decontamination Strategies
- Diagnosis - Basic knowledge of radiation injury
patterns - Treatment - Ready access to specialists with
knowledge of diagnosis and treatment of
radiologic illness
34High Explosive Agents
- Landmines
- UXOs Unexploded Ordinance
- Booby-traps
- Mortars/RPGs rocket propelled grenades
- Rockets
- Suicide Bombers
35High ExplosivePrevention/Treatment
- Prevention - Landmine awareness training
especially for local field staff - Treatment - Adequate staff training on basic and
advanced first-aid techniques - Ready availability of medical expertise/equipment
for patient evaluation/treatment - Evacuation plans well established and
tested