Title: Pandemic Influenza Operations Plans for Communications
1Pandemic Influenza Operations Plans for
Communications
PAHO Outbreak and Crisis Communications
Training William H. Hall Director, Press
Office July 20, 2006
U.S. Department of Health Human Services
2(No Transcript)
3The Point of Planning
- "Plans are worthless, but planning is
everything." -- Dwight D. Eisenhower, United
States President, 1953-1961 - Never could have planned for September 11,
anthrax, SARS, etc. - What we learned from past events has helped us
prepare for future events. - 9/11 ? Anthrax ? SARS ? Katrina ? Pandemic Flu?
4Case Study Anthrax, October 2001
- Just three weeks after September 11 attacks
- Country on heightened alert
- Within days, the media and the government raise
concerns about bioterrorism
5Case Study Anthrax
- October 1, 2001 Photographer Robert L. Stevens
of Palm Beach, Florida returns home from a
vacation in North Carolina and began feeling
sick. - October 2, 2001 Stevens is delirious with fever
and his wife admits him to a Palm Beach hospital.
Symptoms were suggestive of inhalational
anthrax, an extremely rare form of the disease.
Samples are sent to the Florida Department of
Health and the CDC in Atlanta for testing.
6Case Study Anthrax
- October 4, 2001 The Florida Dept. of Health
announces confirmation that Stevens is diagnosed
with inhalational anthrax. - October 4, 2001 At a White House press
conference a few hours later, the United States
health secretary states - It is an isolated case and it is not
contagious. There is no terrorism. Sporadic
cases of anthrax do occur in the United States.
7Case Study Anthrax
- October 12, 2001 A case of anthrax is reported
in New York City. Erin O'Connor, an NBC Nightly
News employee, 38, an assistant to NBC television
anchor Tom Brokaw is reported to have cutaneous
anthrax from exposure to a white powder that fell
from an envelope she opened that was addressed to
Mr. Brokaw. - The third floor of NBC Headquarters at 30
Rockefeller Center in New York City, where the
employee works, is sealed by authorities. The FBI
opens a criminal investigation.
8Case Study Anthrax
- Little understanding of anthrax, especially
inhalational. - Naturally occurring, but rare and usually among
certain types of animal handlers. - Technical information changed by the day, by the
hour. - Media was primed following September 11.
- Media not only was covering, but was a target.
- Situational information scattered, delayed and
difficult to obtain - Law enforcement vs. public health
9Case Study Anthrax
- in their initial handling of the anthrax
crisis, government leaders did almost everything
wrong, according to psychologists and other
researchers. Health and law enforcement
authorities made confident statements that later
proved false, tried simultaneously to inform and
reasssure, and limited the flow of information to
the public. Agencies issued conflicting
statements. Officials speculated about what had
happened or what might happen. And they
simultaneously warned Americans about vague
dangers while urging them to go about their
lives. - -- New York Times, October 23, 2001
10Communications Lessons Learned
- Internal Communications maintain regular daily
contact with key press officers get
communications at the table - External Communications maintain regular daily
contact with key press officers in other federal
ministries state, provincial, district and local
governments - Subject Matter Experts maintain list of
government experts media train those that are
key maintain list of outside experts who will
be supportive
11Communications Lessons Learned
- Basic health and science information prepare
public materials on all hazards ready in
advance doesnt change fills immediate void
reduces media error - Accommodate media needs regular media
briefings designate point(s) of contact for
proper triage, message consistency senior press
officer for TV - Accommodate general public needs use the web
creatively and vigorously, and cross-fertilize
phone questions and web information
12Communications Lessons Learned
- Accuracy, credibility, coherence as presiding
decision-maker, the health minister should be the
visible center of gravity available to media
along with advisors and other senior ministry
officials on the record - Nimbleness need to be able to move fast on
staffing and Web needs - Visual images dont let todays media beat you
with visuals - Situational awareness youll lose quickly when
flying blind put communications officers on the
ground whenever possible.
13Media Lessons Learned
- Critical moments time between first report of
an incident and the governments official
response is critical. Media believe the
government should be able to gather facts more
quickly, or at least state what were gathering. - Balancing speed and accuracy they want
information expect government to have details
in a very short time. - Dispelling rumors they want government to
immediately respond or dispel rumors false
information.
14Media Lessons Learned
- Control of misinformation Media often spend as
much time confirming information as pursuing new. - Embedding media Media often express interest in
gaining a better understanding of agency response
functions and capabilities and often suggested
embedding.
15Whats In a Plan?
- Background describe the project
- Goals your ultimate destination
- Objectives the roads youll take to reach your
destination - Strategies/tactics the vehicles youll use to
travel your chosen roads - Audiences list your target audiences (may need
to divide into primary and secondary)
16Whats In a Plan?
- Messages list 3 to 5 key messages that serve as
the foundation of the project. - Materials list all materials that will be
created and produced to support the project. - Timeline describe when work will begin and end
for all tactics highlight key milestones that
can provide news hooks. - Measurement and Evaluation a brief narrative
describing how the success of the plan will be
measured.
17Whats In a Plan?
- What a plan is something that can be
realistically budgeted and executed simple tools
(email, teleconference line, etc.) get the job
done. - What a plan is not something that is a wish
list that includes expensive, yet
difficult-to-use technologies (e.g. web portal
software). - In the heat of battle, simplicity and speed are
critical
18Operational Plan
- Planning Assumptions how will an event unfold?
(e.g., media will be the first to report first
H5N1 bird, pandemic cluster) - Control who has the lead?
- Coordination how will the messages be
coordinated and distributed (conference line,
Web, partner organizations, etc)? - Communications audiences, spokespeople, message
development/clearance, dissemination (what
channels?), core functions (messaging, writing,
media monitoring, Web, broadcast, Go Team)
19Operational Tools
- Key contact list of government communicators
- Key contact list of international communicators
(countries sharing borders, PAHO, WHO, etc.) - Updated media listkeep it current
- Access line for key media
- Standing conference call line for communicators
to coordinate activities (within Ministry, within
national government, among nations)
20Operational Tools
- Web site (public vs. internal Web portals)
- Media monitoring (newspaper, TV, Web, blogs)
- Prewritten remarks for senior leaders
- Prewritten public announcements
- 48-72 hour communications plans
21Pandemic InfluenzaCommunications Exercise
PAHO Outbreak and Crisis Communications
Training July 20, 2006
U.S. Department of Health Human Services
22Issue
- If the news tomorrow is that a pandemic virus has
emerged, are we as communicators in a global
community ready?
23Purpose
- Coordinate pandemic influenza health messages
across ministries/departments within a national
government. - Coordinate communications activities within a
Member States provincial, state, district and
local communications staff. - Promptly respond to rumors and inaccurate
information to minimize concern, social
disruption, and stigmatization. - Coordinate international information exchange and
communication strategies.
24Objectives
- Discuss awareness of immediate first actions and
contact procedures. - Assess potential communications issues arising
from global media attention. - Identify gaps or additional interagency
coordination requirements. - Promote advanced risk communications planning
among public affairs offices.
25Move 1 Monday July 17, 2006
- The World Health Organization posts an update on
its Web site announcing the 20th confirmed human
case of avian influenza in China. - The report notes that the case is most likely
another rare instance of human to human
transmission, as no other non-human source of
infection can be identified. - The Pandemic Alert Level remains at Level 3.
26Move 1 Tuesday July 18, 2006
- A 68-year-old Canadian citizen who lives in
Ottawa and had recently traveled to Southeast
Asia dies in a hospital in Bridgetown, Barbados
while vacationing with his family. - The man had been diagnosed with influenza, but he
had had a history of other respiratory health
problems. Hospital staff consider the death as
nothing particularly unusual. - The Canadian Embassy in Barbados is notified.
There are no media reports of the death.
27Move 1 Thursday July 20, 2006
- At 945 a.m. Eastern Time the Hong Kong bureau of
the Associated Press publishes a wire story
reporting that an outbreak of an unusually severe
respiratory illness has occurred near the city of
Guangzhou. - The AP report cites several local officials who
confirm that at least 250 people have died within
the past 10 days in the area. - Within hours, the news of the reported outbreak
becomes the lead story on major news networks and
Web sites around the globe.
28Move 1 Discussion
- Which agency within your national government has
the lead role in coordination and information at
this time? - How will you coordinate with other parts of your
national government? With provincial, district
and local government officials? With PAHO? WHO? - What gaps are evident in information production
and, especially, in coordination? What does your
agencys communications office need to do to
engage more closely with your agencys pandemic
response activities? - What are the basic risk communications messages
to deliver for this move? Who will/should
deliver the message? - What is your strategy for communicating with the
public at this point, and/or a course of action
to recommend?
29Move 2 Friday July 21, 2006
- Upon seeing the news from Hong Kong and China, a
nurse at the Bridgetown Hospital who cared for
the Canadian patient calls a local reporter about
the death. - She tells the reporter that during a casual
conversation with the patient, she learned that
he was in Barbados on vacation to relax from his
recent business trip to Hong Kong and Guangzhou.
30Move 2 Friday July 21, 2006
- The reporter makes a series of calls to
investigate, including local hospital and health
ministry officials, PAHO, WHO, the CDC in Atlanta
and a reporter friend who lives in Hong Kong and
works for the CNN bureau there. - At 400 p.m. Eastern time, CNN reports on the
Barbados case, linking that case as possibly
connected to the China outbreak.
31Move 2 Discussion
- Which agency within your national government has
the lead role in coordination and information at
this time? - How will you coordinate with other parts of your
national government? With provincial, district
and local government officials? With PAHO? WHO? - What gaps are evident in information production
and, especially, in coordination? What does your
agencys communications office need to do to
engage more closely with your agencys pandemic
response activities? - What are the basic risk communications messages
to deliver for this move? Who will/should
deliver the message? - What is your strategy for communicating with the
public at this point, and/or a course of action
to recommend?
32Move 3 Saturday July 22, 2006
- Barbados announces two additional deaths from an
influenza-like respiratory illness similar to
the initial case. - One case was a businessman from Brazil who had
stayed in the same hotel as the Canadian tourist.
The other case was a female student from
Argentina who had no contact with the Canadian
case. - The World Health Organization announces that it
is sending teams to China and to Barbados to
investigate but holds off on raising the Pandemic
Alert Level.
33Move 3 Saturday July 22, 2006
- The recently appointed Canadian Minister of
Health, fearing a repeat of Torontos SARS
experience in 2003, announces that a global
pandemic is upon us and that Canada should ban
all flights originating from the Caribbean and
from Southeast Asia. - The media are reporting that increasing numbers
of tourists are cancelling their trips to the
Caribbean and that, if sustained, the viability
of the economies of many Caribbean nations could
be threatened.
34Move 3 Discussion
- Which agency within your national government has
the lead role in coordination and information at
this time? - How will you coordinate with other parts of your
national government? With provincial, district
and local government officials? With PAHO? WHO? - What gaps are evident in information production
and, especially, in coordination? What does your
agencys communications office need to do to
engage more closely with your agencys pandemic
response activities? - What are the basic risk communications messages
to deliver for this move? Who will/should
deliver the message? - What is your strategy for communicating with the
public at this point, and/or a course of action
to recommend?
35Wrapup/Conclusions
- Maintain regular contact before, during and after
an influenza pandemic - Exchange pre-released public health messages on a
regular basis before, during and after a pandemic
outbreak - Develop communications playbooks and plans that
can be budgeted and are executable--not a wish
list plan to evaluate and update plans
following a real world incident
36Wrapup/Conclusions
- Meet regularly on communications issues
- Identify appropriate liaisons from each Nation
who will maintain regular contact, share
information and identify and address emerging
issues and - Share communications products when appropriate.
- Leadership from PAHO and WHO