Title: An Overview of Princeton
1An Overview of Princetons Program on Science and
Global Security Biodefense Activities
- Laura H. Kahn, MD, MPH, MPPResearch Staff
- Program on Science and Global Security, WWS,
Princeton University - 7th NJ Universities Homeland Security Research
Consortium Symposium, New Brunswick, November,
2006
2Co-Principal Investigators
- Laura H. Kahn, MD, MPH, MPP Research Staff member
- Frank von Hippel, PhD, Professor of Public and
International Affairs - Christopher Chyba, PhD, Professor of
Astrophysical Sciences and International Affairs.
Professor Chyba recently served on the IOM/NRC
panel on "Globalization, Biosecurity, and the
Future of the Life Sciences."
3Activities at Princeton University
- Biodefense Seminar Series supported by the
Carnegie Corporation of New York - Description of Series
- Papers from Series
- Four State Public Health Preparedness Study
supported by the Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation of
New York - Key Findings
4Carnegie Biodefense Seminar Series
- Goals
- To engage leading university, biotech, and
pharmaceutical industry scientists in discussions
with security analysts of issues of biodefense,
biothreats, biosecurity, biosafety, and
bioethics. - To help the life sciences community contribute to
biodefense policy development. - To develop collaborative relationships between
policy and security experts and the bioscience
community to deal with the dual-use dangers of
modern biology.
52003-2004 Seminar Series
- Dr. David Franz, Vice President, Chemical and
Biological Defense Division, Southern Research
Institute, Biosafety Level 4 labs What
research, how many and where? - Dr. Mark Wheelis, Professor of Microbiology, UC
Davis, The Role for International Transparency
in Biodefense R D. - Dr. Michael Moodie, President of the Chemical and
Biological Arms Control Institute, Washington DC
and Dr. Jonathan Tucker, Senior Researcher,
Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey
Institute of International Studies,
Strengthening the BWC Lessons Learned from the
Failed Attempt to Agree on a Verification
Protocol Where Next? - Dr. Adel Mahmoud, President, Merck Vaccines,
Merck and Co, Inc., Technical, Economic and
Legal Obstacles to the Development of Vaccines
and Other Therapeutics for Potential Bioterrorism
Agents.
62006 Spring Seminar Series
- Dr. Richard Ebright, Rutgers University,
'Biodefense Research NIH Role, NIH Management,
Oversight of Safety, Oversight of Security, and
Oversight of Dual-Use Implications. - Dr. Nancy Connell, UMDNJ, 'Codes of Ethics and
Whistleblowers in Biodefense Research. - Dr. Alan Pearson, Center for Arms Control and
Nonproliferation, 'Incapacitating Biochemical
Weapons. - Dr. Christopher Chyba, Princeton University,
Proposed International Regimes for Regulating
Biotechnology Research - Dr. Scott Steele, FBI, Coordination on
Bioterrorism Prevention, Preparedness, and
Response Initiatives. - Dr. Laura Donohue, Stanford University,
Terrorist Speech and the Future of Free
Expression.
7Spring Seminar Series at University of Medicine
and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ) (Coordinated
by Dr. Nancy Connell)
- Dr. Malcolm Dando, University of Bradford, UK
Dr. Brian Rappert, University of Exeter, UK, "The
Life Sciences, Bio-security and Dual-Use
Research." - Dr. Michael Allswede, University of Pittsburgh
Medical Center, "Forensic Epidemiology." - Dr. Gigi Kwik-Gronvall, Center for Civilian
Biodefense Studies, University of Pittsburgh,
From Anthrax to Flu Preparing the Country for
Biological Threats. -
8Fall 2006 Seminar Series
- October 6 Dr. Stanley Lemon, Chair and Director
of the Institute for Human Infections and
Immunity, University of Texas Medical Branch.
Biosecurity vs Bioinsecurity BSL4 Research in
the 21st Century. - October 13 Milton Leitenberg, Senior Research
Scholar on Arms Control and Biological Weapons,
School of Public Policy, University of Maryland.
Assessing Biological Weapons and Bioterrorism
Threat. - October 20 Ambassador Donald A. Mahley, Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Threat Reduction, Export
Controls, and Negotiations, U.S. Department of
State. The Debate over the Role of the
Biological Weapons Convention in Todays
Bio-Defense Equation.
9Fall 2006 Seminar Series (continued)
- October 27 Dr. Jens Kuhn, Research Scholar,
Division of Tumor Virology, New England Primate
Research Center, Harvard Medical School.
Integration of Former Soviet Bioweapons
Facilities into the International Research
CommunitySuccess or Failure? - December 1, 2006 Dr. Dennis Kasper, Director
Channing Laboratory, William Ellery Channing
Professor of Medicine, Professor of Microbiology
and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School.
Chair of the National Science Advisory Board for
Biosecurity. What is the NSABB all about? - December 8, 2006 Dr. W. Ian Lipkin, Jerome L and
Dawn Greene Professor of Epidemiology and
Director of the Infectious Disease Laboratory
Mailman School of Public Health Principal
Investigator and Scientific Director, Northeast
Biodefense Center, College of Physicians and
Surgeons, Columbia University. Pathogen
Surveillance and Discovery.
10Papers from Series
- LH Kahn, Biodefense Research Can Secrecy and
Safety Co-Exist? Biosecurity and Bioterroism
2004, Volume 2. http//www.scienceboard.net/commun
ity/perspectives.110.html - J Tucker, Biological Threat Assessment Is the
Cure Worse than the Disease? Arms Control Today,
October 2004. http//www.armscontrol.org/act/2004_
10/Tucker.asp - S Wright, Taking Biodefense Too Far, Bulletin
of the Atomic Scientists, Nov/Dec 2004.
http//www.thebulletin.org/article.php?art_ofnnd0
4wright
11Biodefense Research Can Secrecy and Safety
Co-Exist?
- Paper examined the interface between secrecy and
safety. - Transparency of Select Agent Research to First
Responders (physicians and public health
professionals) - A National Surveillance System of
Laboratory-acquired infections - Provide epidemiologic data on the incidence,
severity, and community impact, if any, of these
infections.
12Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation Supported Four State
Public Health Preparedness Study
- Goals of study
- To assess how state and local health departments,
and state agriculture departments, are responding
to the threats of emerging infectious diseases
and bioterrorism. - To assess leadership, disease surveillance,
clinical capabilities, laboratory capabilities,
communications, funding, and attitudes. - Four states were studied New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. Surveyed all
local health departments and over 4000 physicians
and 4000 veterinarians.
13Key Findings
- For human public health, there is confusion
between political and professional leadership.
Confusion did not exist for animal health. - Minimal physician and veterinarian engagement
with local public health organizations. Over a
quarter of the respondents did not know if their
community had a local public health agency or
not. - Physicians and veterinarians opinions of local
public health agency capabilities during a crisis
were uniformly low.
14Key Findings
- There is minimal communication between physicians
and veterinarians. In an era in which the vast
majority of emerging infectious diseases are
zoonotic, communication and collaboration between
these professionals is critical. - With the exception of New York State, few of the
local public health agencies were able to provide
incidence-rate data for many vaccine-preventable
diseases in human populations.
15Key Findings
- In a crisis situation, public health would be
almost entirely dependent on volunteers, local
clinics, physicians offices, and the National
Guard for out-of-hospital clinical and preventive
services. - Vaccination and disease statistics for all
species of animals were not available in all four
states.
16Key Findings
- Local public health agencies that depended upon
local sources for primary funding were 11 times
less likely to have received federal biodefense
funds than agencies that received most of their
funding from the state. - Local public health agencies that had received
federal biodefense funding were more likely to
have hired new surveillance staff and new
equipment than those that did not receive these
funds.
17Thank you!
- Carnegie Biodefense Seminar Series
http//www.princeton.edu/globsec/BW_series/index.
html - Four State Public Health Preparedness Report
http//www.princeton.edu/globsec/Macy/index.html