Title: Smallpox
1Smallpox BioterorrismWhat Went WrongWhat To
Do
- William J. Bicknell, MD, MPH
- Boston University School of Public Health
- Former Massachusetts Commissioner of Public
Health - Kenneth D. Bloem
- Former CEO Stanford University Hospital
Georgetown Medical Center
2Why are we doing this?
- Neither of us work for a federal, state or local
health agency - We are not consultants to or employed by any
firm or group that has a special interest in
vaccination - We became involved as, whether coming from a
public health (WB) or acute medical care (KB)
perspective, we felt the nation was and is making
many dangerous missteps.
3Smallpox Bioterrorism What Went Wrong What
To Do
- I - The threat, the plan the status
- II - Four false premises the real risk of
vaccinating healthy adults - III - Why the plan is failing
- IV - Underlying reasons for failure
- V - Our recommendations - Who should do what
4Six Major Points
- Vaccination Works
- Vaccination is Extremely Safe in Healthy Adults
- Smallpox is the only BT weapon for which there is
a proven, low cost, preventive approach -
vaccination - that neutralizes the smallpox
weapon before it is used - This means, with just a little bit of effort, we
can eliminate smallpox as an effective
bioterrorist weapon - IF WE VACCINATE ENOUGH
PEOPLE PRE-ATTACK NOW - So far we have chosen NOT TO DO THIS
- The potential unimaginably high social, economic,
death human misery consequences to the United
States require ACTION NOW
5Caveats
- We will be pointing out various problems we
perceive with implementing the Presidents plan. - Our concerns are organizational and systemic not
personal. - Further
- we recognize that all parties share a common goal
- minimizing the nations vulnerability to
smallpox introduced by bioterrorists. - Thousands, possibly tens of thousands of
professionals have been and are continuing to
work diligently toward this goal. - Our only objective is to improve the nation's
effectiveness in minimizing our vulnerability.
6Are We at Risk?
- Until the national security apparatus says
otherwise, we continue to believe there is an
unquantifiable but real risk of a bioterrorist
attack using smallpox - with up to 1000s or 10s of thousands of cases
- 30 deaths
- 60 to 80 of survivors disfigured
- The cases and deaths, with advance preparation,
can be reduced to very small numbers - The key is preparation now
- If you think there is no risk of smallpox as a BT
weapon, then no need to stay for the rest of the
talk
7Smallpox is a Bad Disease
- It kills 30
- It spreads easily
- It is spreading before you even know it has
arrived - And dont think high tech bio-detectors will
result in early detection sufficient to protect
the population. - Although panic is felt to be unlikely in most
terrorist situations, the reality of a spreading
deadly disease with an inadequate government
response could easily lead to persons acting in
their own best interests - what government likes
to call panic.
8A Chilling Scenario
- One person with smallpox arriving in the country
traveled by train.he was apparently in the
initial phase of the disease, as nobody noticed a
rash on his faceAlmost everyone who traveled
with him in the compartment from Queensborough to
Manchester contracted smallpox, the ticket
collector...and those who traveled with him to
Stalybridge in another train, something like a
hundred people being infected from one single
case. - Not so different from flying in from Europe,
traveling downtown by public transport and taking
a train to the next city - And terrorists are very motivated, so expect them
to travel even if feeling quite ill
Wanklyn (1913) cited in Dixon p311
9What might this look like in the US?
- Here is a model with one set of assumptions
- Anyone who would like the model need only email
me ltwbicknel_at_bu.edugt - You can make you own assumptions
- The next slide assumes a well planned and well
executed terrorist attack with 12 terrorists
going to multiple cities.
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11The Presidents Plan
- Phase I
- 500,000 civilian first responders by February
2003 but only 38,436 (9/5/03) - 500,000 military - essentially done done safely
(over 490,000 as of 9/9/03) - Phase II
- Up to 10,000,000 health and emergency workers by
mid-summer 2003. Actual number ZERO - Phase III
- Starting mid-2003 permit healthy adults to opt
for vaccination. Actual number ZERO - All Phases
- Voluntary Vaccination of Healthy Adults
12Effective Control of a Bioterrorist Use of
Smallpox Requires Preparation Before an Attack
- The MINIMUM Requirement is
- Vaccine, needles and VIG - We have enough
- A tested system in place for rapid post-attack
mass vaccination - We dont have this - Enough vaccinated people pre-attack sufficient to
- Staff clinics for mass vaccination - dont have
- Enough people vaccinated pre-attack so that
vaccinators neither have to be vaccinated first
nor are they scared to assemble and to get
vaccinated and then vaccinate others - dont have - Safely transport smallpox patients to hospitals -
dont have - Care for smallpox patients without getting
infected - dont have - Doing more than the minimum is even better
- Other hospital workers and emergency workers - no
longer being discussed - Healthy adults in the general population who
choose voluntary vaccination - silence reigns
13The Current Situation
- If something occurred, we would pull out all the
stops after the first few cases - Result
- Excess deaths and disfigurement but
- We would wrap up smallpox fairly quickly
- Probably in 8 to 12 weeks
- With enormous socio-economic disruption excess
deaths and unnecessary excess leakage to other
countries - Plenty of recriminations afterward
- This should not be acceptable, is not necessary
and certainly is not sufficient.
14Preparedness Bottom Line
- We are not prepared
- A well done attack could cost many 1000s of
lives, more sickness and incalculable national
social and economic disruption. - We have only to look at the impact of SARS -
comparatively a very minor event - to put
smallpox in perspective. - And Monkeypox to realize that identification can
easily be slow - If we choose to prepare, we can
- The cost can be far less than is widely believed
and with virtually no health risk - But it appears we may just not care
15Smallpox Bioterrorism What Went Wrong What
To Do
- I - The threat, the plan the status
- II - Four False premises the real risk of
vaccinating healthy adults - III - Why the plan is failing
- IV - Underlying reasons for failure
- V - Our recommendations - Who should do what
16Why arent we prepared?
- The answer is complex
- More than just errors of fact
- First we will address factual issues
- Then we will turn to the more complex and subtle
organizational and cultural issues that help to
explain inertia - We will suggest that public health organizations
have cultures that are as difficult to change as
those in law enforcement, intelligence and
aerospace - But first, lets clear up critical
misunderstandings and present some key facts
17Four False Premises
- 1 - Control after an attack will not be hard and
ring vaccination (the technique used to some
extent in smallpox eradication) will work - 2 - Pre-attack Vaccination, beyond minimal, is
just too risky - 3 - The number of persons vaccinated pre-attack
is not important - 4 - Pre-event vaccination is too expensive and
diverts money and people from other essential
public health programs - Each of these premises is seriously flawed
181 - Ring Vaccination Ease of Control
- Today we must assume
- Malicious clever dissemination
- We know our population is
- 50 without immunity and 50 with unknown but
partial and declining immunity from pre-1972
vaccination - Highly mobile
- Ring vaccination took years to work when
population immunity was high and rising,
populations were far less mobile and there was no
malicious intent to disseminate disease - Putting 99 of our eggs in the post-attack, ring
containment basket is fraught with hazard (see
Kaplan, Craft Wein) - The good news - there is movement away from the
ring approach to mass vaccination post-attack - Unfortunately, we are not yet prepared to do this
192 - The Risk of Vaccination in Healthy Adults
- As vaccine risk is at the heart of the problem,
lets now move to considering the real risk of
vaccinating healthy adults - We say healthy adults as thats what the
President's plan calls for.
20Risk of Vaccinating Healthy Adults
- CDC has never publicized the risks of the target
group - healthy adults - CDC has commingled risk for healthy and sick
adults and children. - Sick adults and children have higher, much higher
risk. We are not vaccinating them. Their risk
profile is not relevant to the Presidents plan
and is misleading - Lets look at risk in healthy adults
21Adult Risk of Death from Smallpox Vaccination
- Historical US data (details see paper)
- 126,000,000 adults children, healthy and sick
vaccinated 1959 - 66 68 with 68 deaths - 1 death/1,800,000
- Eliminate children. 45,000,000 adults
vaccinated - Eliminate deaths in sick adults we would screen
out today 5 deaths (cancers and a connective
tissue disorder) - 2 or 3 deaths remain from PVE (post-vaccinal
encephalitis) or 3 in 45,000,000 or - 1 per 15,000,000
- Conclusion Very likely that vaccinating
10,000,000 in Phase II ZERO deaths.
22Military vs. Civilian
- Military - over 490,000 vaccinated since December
2002 - Deaths ZERO (attributed to vaccination)
- Major adverse events ZERO
- Minor adverse events, all full recovery 103
- Use of VIG Twice
- Tens of Millions of military vaccinated since
1945 - ZERO deaths - These are HEALTHY ADULTS as called for in the
Presidents plan - 70 younger first time
vaccinees, 30 older revaccinees - Our military experience is very relevant,
includes older and younger, unvaccinated and
previously vaccinated. - Civilian about 38,500 and STALLED
- Coronary events Amazing willingness to associate
temporal association absent biologic plausibility
with causation - Myocarditis Real but not long-lasting
23A Word on Cardiac Complications
- Two types - Cardiovascular Myocarditis
- Cardiovascular events (heart attack and chest
pain that may precede a heart attack). - The military rates of heart attack and similar
events did not change with vaccination. That is,
older people had neither fewer nor more
cardiovascular events during the time when
smallpox vaccinations were being given. These
cardiovascular events are UNRELATED to smallpox
vaccination
24Myocarditis
- Some myocarditis is related to smallpox
vaccination - Many immunizations and infections cause
myocarditis - Finns had 126 cases in recruits 10
smallpox, 90 other vaccines and common
infections - We detect myocarditis now and not in the past
probably because of better diagnostic techniques
and better surveillance - Rate about 1 in 7,500
- Short term varies from trivial to
hospitalization, mostly minor - Long-term - no long term complications and death
very, very rare and has not occurred with either
the military or civilian program
25How About Accidental Vaccination of Others?
- I get vaccinated, my wife is on chemotherapy, a
co-worker is HIV or I have a child with eczema
at home. - Considering historical data, the recent US
military experience, using the semi-permeable
membrane dressing, long sleeves good counseling
and some reassignment of clinical workers means
the risk of an accidental infection resulting in
death is less than 1 in 10,000,000 if healthy
adults are vaccinated in Phase II. - Or, most likely, no one will die or have serious
long-term side-effects if Phase I Phase II of
the Presidents plan are fully implemented
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27Vaccination Bottom Line
- Vaccination is good for 10 years, possibly more
- Healthy adults, you and I, have a 10 year risk of
accidental death (falls, MVA, ski accident, etc)
of 1/333 - Just living 10 years is 42,000 time more
dangerous than one smallpox vaccination every 10
years! - Or, if you dont worry about driving to work or
dying by accident on vacation and you are a
healthy adult - dont worry about getting
vaccinated or accidentally vaccinating someone
else. - This is NOT the current impression in the medical
and public health communities. - CDC and HHS have an affirmative obligation to
correct and widely publicize the misperceptions
about risk to healthy adults - Why? The Presidents plan calls for vaccinating
healthy adults and for the nation to be protected
it is essential this group have accurate,
understandable information about risk.
28Vaccination Disease Transmission Errors in
Detail
- Risk of vaccine OVERSTATED
- 1/15,000,000 deaths in healthy adults not 1 or
2/million - Who can transmit how easily UNDERSTATED
- 4-Day Window MOSTLY MIS-STATED
- Rationale for whom to vaccinate and why specific
numbers not clearly articulated.
Based on recalculation of published existing
data NEJM Lane et al 1969, NEJM Neff et al
1967, JAMA Lane et al 1970 Bicknell James,
Reviews in Med. Virology, 2003 and Clin. Inf.
Dis. Letter to Editor, August 2003
293 - The number of persons vaccinated pre-attack
is not important
- Lets examine this premise and see why it is
flawed.
30CDC - Vaccinate the entire country in 10 days
- This is a laudable, ambitious, appropriate and
very challenging goal. - What will it take to accomplish this?
- Many disseminated vaccination sites in all urban,
suburban and rural areas. - Huge sites with tens to hundreds of thousands
attending over a short period of time wont work - Traffic, parking and toilet needs alone preclude
this - Massachusetts feels 600 sites for about 6,000,000
people is about right - Lets do the numbers
Handout available on request
31Why do numbers count?
- Massachusetts has moved, appropriately, from a
few large vaccination centers to planning for 600
sites (schools) - We have calculated what we think are high and low
levels of staffing for 600 sites and extrapolated
this to the nation - Our estimate of clinic staffing levels range from
1,285,538 to 1,681,088 to vaccinate the
country within 10 days - If CDC staffing guidelines are applied the number
RISES to 3,516,000 - And we have about 38,500 people vaccinated
- Numbers MUST count
We are NOT speaking for Massachusetts
32Numbers do Count - Phase I Summarized
- Vaccination teams
- Low estimate 1,286,000
- High estimate 1,681,000
- Transport team 20,400
- Hospital Personnel 696,000
- Total 2,002,000 to 2,397,000
- BUT, if CDC post-event clinic staffing guidelines
applied to vaccination teams then 1,681,000
becomes 3,516,000 and the total 4,232,000! - And we have only 38,500.
- Insufficient vaccinators means delay in
vaccination with needless death and great social
and economic disruption - NUMBERS, SYSTEMS AND OUTPUT DO COUNT
334 - The Final False Premise
- Pre-event vaccination is too expensive and
diverts money and people from other essential
public health programs
34Cost Diverting Resources
- Up to more than 700/vaccination has been
reported as a cost. - Tiny volumes and high staffing can make anything
costly - Decent volumes and more realistic staffing with
just enough people for screening, jabbing and
record keeping are all that is needed. - State budget crunches are very difficult but are
not caused by smallpox planning. - Although theoretically money is money, the
possibility of moving funds from BT to support
other public health programs is questionable at
best.
35Smallpox Bioterrorism What Went Wrong What
To Do
- I - The threat, the plan the status
- II - Four false premises the real risk of
vaccinating healthy adults - III - Why the plan is failing
- IV - Underlying reasons for failure
- V - Our recommendations - Who should do what
36The Weight of the Evidence
- Even though the weight of the evidence supports
the President's Plan - When we get to recommendations we will return to
whether the plan is stalled or is it suspended? - Lets look at a diagram
37The Weight of the Evidence
- Unfortunately, a miscalculated and misrepresented
cost of prevention has prevailed over a
consideration of the full costs of an attack
38Why the Plan is Failing
- Rationale neither well framed nor well
articulated. - Initial program introduction maladroit and
delayed - Liability and compensation risk overstated and
legislation was delayed - Lack of understanding of acute health care system
(links to hospitals and physicians) - surge
capacity, staff shortages, funding needs - Post Iraq war perception that risk is much lower
coupled with increased skepticism about
intelligence information - CDC Performance
39CDC Performance
- Initial CDC approach not accepted by the
Administration. CDC subsequently charged with
implementing a program they had opposed - CDC comingled risk of vaccination in sick adults
and children with healthy adults, vastly
overstating risk - Other Misinformation
- Effectiveness of ring vaccination
- Ease of early diagnosis
- Unimportance of numbers of pre-attack vaccinees
- States hesitant to criticize CDC
40Smallpox Bioterrorism What Went Wrong What
To Do
- I - The threat, the plan the status
- II - Three false premises the real risk of
vaccinating healthy adults - III - Why the plan is failing
- IV - Underlying reasons for failure
- V - Our recommendations - Who should do what
41Deeper Reasons for Failure
- Organizational resistance
- Ideological dissonance
- Culture of caution
- Lack of a systems orientation
42Organizational Resistance - 1
- Resistance to change is usual in organizations
and in professions, especially when - Organizations are shielded from markets
- Change is paradigmatic
- FBI CIA post September and NASA now
- Original CDC pre-attack smallpox plan rejected by
Administration. Later CDC charged with
implementing a plan not of its making - CDC smallpox veterans have additional reason to
resist pre-attack vaccination - De facto admission of potential failure of
eradication
43Organizational Resistance - 2
- Within local state health departments
resistance to new priority of biodefense - Dont trade off my underfunded program
(nutrition, TB, AIDS, SARS, etc.) for a
hypothetical, uncertain event - Biodefense interpreted by some as
military/intelligence agencies contaminating
public health priorities.
44Ideological Dissonance
- To respond preemptively to biodefense concerns
requires accepting governments assessment of
threat - Bioterrorism threat seen by many in public health
as a next false chapter after the cold war - Biodefense investments seen by many as a
substitute for commitment to known and pressing
public health priorities - Acute care sector, driven by market economics,
sees biodefense as a potential unfunded mandate - Some in public health and medical community
skeptical of current administration
45Public Health A Culture of Caution
- System rewards problem identification, collecting
information and decision-making with considerable
certainty - the antithesis of what is likely in a
BT event - Culture of professional autonomy Collegial, not
hierarchical relationships not command and
control - Public health largely deals with known,
observable problems --not with hypothetical
events - Public health is shielded from the market place
funding, programs, and staff are governmental --
seldom a need for quick change - Decision usually incremental and barely visible
draconian actions are rare - Lingering bitter memories of failed swine flu
vaccination program
46Lack of Systems Orientation
- Insufficient recognition of the role of acute
medical care system in biodefense response - Insufficient recognition of the strengths,
resources and lessons represented by the military - Inability to deal with low probability high
stakes potential events - Deficient in ability in ability to make quick
decision under circumstances of great uncertainty - Deficient in ability to assess and communicate
relative risks
47The Major Factors in Summary
- Confusing successful eradication with what will
work for terrorism - The issues and risk of attack and vaccination
were never clearly and consistently articulated
by the administration - White House, HHS and Homeland Security continuing
commitment seen as weak - Deficient systems thinking in Public Health
- A risk-averse culture
- Fear of attack
- Fear of preparation
- Uncertainty as to how to balance risks
consequences of prevention vs. attack - Our federal-state structure makes command and
control relevant to bioterrorism very difficult - Some distrust of government
- If an attack occurs - lousy data uncertainty
- Public Health deals retrospectively, with the
best possible data - Terrorism deals with the moment and limited,
lousy data
48Smallpox Bioterrorism What Went Wrong What
To Do
- I - The threat, the plan the status
- II - Three false premises the real risk of
vaccinating healthy adults - III - Why the plan is failing
- IV - Underlying reasons for failure
- V - Our recommendations - Who should do what
49Phase I - What CDC Should Do
- Widely disseminate accurate vaccine risk data
relevant to healthy adults and aggressively
correct misinformation re - Vaccine risk
- The ability to vaccinate ands the effectiveness
of vaccinating within 4 days of exposure. - The need to plan for mass vaccination, not ring
containment, post event - Establish a clear, feasible, testable, post-event
objective - For example - Vaccinate 95 of the population in 10 days.
- Propose a vaccinated personnel/population ratio
based on numerous, disseminated vaccination sites
for states to either accept or show cause why the
number should be higher or lower for Phase I
vaccinees - Rigorously test the objective and derivative
state and local plans by careful systems
analysis, table top exercises and a limited
number of mock full scale exercises.
50Our Suggested Phase I Starting Point
- Vaccination Teams
- 6,000 vaccinated team members/1,000,000 or
nationwide 1,760,000 health and related personnel
to staff 90 to 100 post-event, vaccination sites
per million people. - Teams have practiced and vaccine distribution has
been tested - Public know exactly where to go for vaccination
and how to find out when to go - Standard Vaccinate 95 of population in every
state within 10 days - Transporting Suspected Smallpox Patients
- 1 transport team/million people and no less than
one per state 20,393 vaccinated transport
personnel - Standard - 24/7 coverage by essential vaccinated
personnel - Hospital-based care givers for smallpox patients
- 696,000 Hospital personnel vaccinated
- Standard - Emergency unit, isolation room(s) and
support areas staffed 24/7 with vaccinated
personnel in 2/3 of the US acute general
hospitals
Our assumptions and calculations are available on
request after the talk or by email
51Next Steps - 1
- If true, reassert the threat is real and
continuing - White House Homeland Security - Is the plan the plan or is it suspended?
- We urge reaffirmation of a fundamentally sound
plan - Aggressively and widely disseminate accurate and
understandable vaccine risk information relevant
to healthy adults - HHS and CDC - Use the semi-permeable membrane dressing for
everyone - state local health departments - Pre-position vaccine and related supplies at the
state level in sufficient quantities to carry out
48 hours of vaccination - CDC - Develop nuanced criteria for post-event
vaccination that probably should vary by
proximity - in a DC event virtually everyone is
vaccinated in DC, but northern Idaho may be more
selective and vice-versa.
52Next Steps - 2
- Establish performance based post-event planning
guidelines - CDC - To pinpoint the actual Phase I numbers needed
- To assure realistic post-event plans
- Note that not only is liability and compensation
legislation in place, the likelihood of more than
one or two people needing to access this resource
is very small - CDC HHS - The White House, Homeland Security and HHS need
to enlist the support of the medical, nursing,
hospital management and public health communities
and their various professional organizations
53Phase II Phase III
- Phase II
- Develop standards for vaccine coverage in acute
general hospitals, ambulatory care and EMS sites
such as 60 of hospital workers vaccinated. Then,
derive the numbers - Develop standards for coverage of fire, police
and other emergency workers sufficient to assure
minimal adequate function while post-event
vaccination takes place, perhaps 10. Then derive
the numbers - Add together Phase II number 6 to 10 million
in addition to Phase I - Phase III
- Make vaccine available through many normal
ambulatory care sites for healthy adults
54Phase III - the Rest of Us
- Citizens just arent smart enough to decide for
themselves about vaccination. - This reflects a not uncommon point of view in the
public health and medical communities. - Given the misinformation about vaccine safety
since 9/11 and the absence of an effective pre or
post event program, it is all the more important
that citizens have access to a safe and proven
vaccine that reduces individual risk from a BT
smallpox attack to ZERO. - Long ago Mr. Jefferson offered a still timely
caution.
55I know of no safe depository of the ultimate
powers of the society but the people themselves
and if we think them not enlightened enough to
exercise their control with a wholesome
discretion, the remedy is not to take it from
them but to inform their discretion. Thomas
Jefferson
Quotation courtesy of Dr. Greg Saathoff
56Decision Making in Public HealthA Larger Context
- Public health prefers to deal with events once
full data are available. - Proactive decision-making when nothing has yet
happened (smallpox) is an alien notion - Emergencies with lethal potential may require
quick, far-reaching decisions with limited data
of uncertain quality - Risky stuff for a risk
averse profession - Contemplating, let alone taking, draconian action
without the certain knowledge that the action
will, in hindsight, be correct is largely not in
the lexicon of public health decision-makers - This may limit the relevance of public health to
bioterrorism control
57What is the Role Place of Public Health in
Bioterrorism
- Recognize that the Public Health System has not
historically been relevant to the type of
emergency represented by BT and is unlikely to be
relevant in the future - The culture and mind
set of PH is substantially antithetical to the
mindset needed for BT preparedness and response. - The public health system may need strengthening.
However, it may not follow that a stronger public
health system leads to better preparedness for
bioterrorism. - This merits full public debate.
58Therefore
- Focus on the Acute Care system - Hospitals,
Emergency Medical Services and larger clinics - Provide accurate, relevant vaccine risk data
- Emphasize the Public Health role as primarily
epidemiology and lab support. But the
epidemiology must be better to be safe - Establish national response standards that must
be validated on a state-by-state basis - How states organize and manage to meet the
standards can and should vary - Multi-state, federal-state and within state
coordination (horizontal and vertical
coordination) remain problematic and should be a
priority concern of Homeland Security.
59Thank You
Email to wbicknel_at_bu.edu KDBloem_at_aol.com