Title: Natural Disasters Infectious Diseases, Insect Plagues and Parasites
1Natural DisastersInfectious Diseases, Insect
Plagues and Parasites
2Background
- Historically, infectious disease epidemics have
high mortality (AIDS, SPANISH FLU 1918) - Disasters have potential for social disruption
and death - Epidemics are worsened when infrastructure breaks
down (NO HOSPITALS) - A natural disaster (Haiti hurricane) leads to an
epidemic of an infectious disease (cholera)?
3What is an emerging infectious disease?
- In 1991, Institute of Medicine attempted to
define - new, re-emerging, or drug resistant infections
whose incidence in humans has increased within
the past 2 decades or whose incidence threatens
to increase in the near future.
4Phases of Disaster
- Impact Phase (0-4 days)
- Extrication
- Immediate soft tissue infections
- Post impact Phase (4 days- 4 weeks)
- Airborne, foodborne, waterborne and vector
diseases - Recovery phase (after 4 weeks)
- Those with long incubation and of chronic
disease
5Factors for Disease Transmission After a Disaster
- Environmental considerations
- Endemic organisms
- Population characteristics-pop.density, overall
health, poverty - Pre- event structure and public health
- Type and magnitude of the disaster
6Environmental Considerations
- Climate
- Cold- airborne
- Warm- waterborne
- Season (USA)
- Winter- influenza YouTube - The H1N1 Swine
Flu A Look Inside - Rainfall
- El Nino years increase malaria (more flooding)
in South America (Eastern Pacific) and more
Drought (western Pacific/Asia)-malnutrition-hunger
diseases (more detail in food unit on drought
and famine) -
7Population Characteristics
- Density
- Displaced populations
- Refugee camps
- Age
- Increased elderly or children-more vulnerable
- Chronic Diseases
- Malnutrition
- Heart disease
8Population Characteristics
- Education
- Less responsive to disaster teams
- Religion-some dont allow medicines
- Hygiene levels
- Underlying health education of public
- Trauma to body from disasters
- Penetrating, blunt, burns
- Stress levels post disaster
9A REFUGEE CAMP- Infectious diseases thrive
10SHANTYTOWN- Poor PLACES IN LDCs/ LLDCS WHERE
INFECTIONS SPREAD because of density and lack of
health care
11Pre-disaster resources the level of these
determine the extent the diseases thrive
- Sanitation
- Primary health care and nutrition
- Disaster preparedness
- Disease surveillance
- Equipment and medications
- Transportation
- Roads
- Medical infrastructure
12Type of disaster
- Earthquake
- Crush and penetrating injuries
- Hurricane (Monsoon, Typhoon) and Flooding
- Water contamination, vector borne diseases
- Tornado
- Crush
- Volcano
- Water contamination, airway diseases
- Magnitude
- Bigger can mean more likelihood for epidemics
13Dominican Republic, 1979
- Hurricane David and Fredrick on Aug 31 and Sept
5th 1979 - gt2,300 dead immediately
- Marked increase in all diseases measured
- 6 months after the hurricane
- Thyphoid fever
- Gastroenteritis
- Measles
- Viral hepatitis
14Epidemics after Disasters
- San Francisco, 1906 Fires Plague resulting from
Quarantine failure - Duluth, MN, 1918 Forest Fire Influenza resulting
from crowding and epidemic - Italy, 1976 Earthquake Salmonella Carriers due
to sanitation stoppage - Haiti, 2010 Cholera after Earthquake Devastated
the country - U.N. says Haiti cholera protests may be
politically motivated - CNN.com
15Summary of Factors
- Many factors play a role in disease development
and outbreaks - Change of disease not likely to play role
- Increase in rare diseases
- Change and/or closing of public health measures
play a big role
16Post-Impact Phase Infections
- Crush and penetrating trauma
- Skin and soft tissue disruption
- Muscle/tissue necrosis
- Toxin production disease
- Burns
- Waterborne illnesses
- Gastroenteritis (stomach diseases)
- Cholera U.N. says Haiti cholera protests may
be politically motivated - CNN.com - Non-cholera dysentery
- Hepatitis (affect liver function)
- Rare diseases like dengue (mosquito spread
like malaria) - YouTube - Thailand battles Dengue fever - 17 Oct
08 - YouTube - The Ebola Virus Presentation
17General disaster reminders
- Vaccinations are the mainstay of outbreak control
in many situations - Dead bodies pose little to no infectious disease
risk however this is debated - Early surveillance and hygiene can prevent
outbreaks
18Classification System
- Biological Hazards
- -Infectious Disease (AIDS, H1N1)
- -Parasitic Disease (river blindness, tape worm,
ring worm) - -Insect Infestation (plague of locusts)
- -Plant Disease
- (Irish potato famine due to blight)
19(No Transcript)
20The Black Plague
The Bubonic Plague of Medieval Europe
21The cause of the plague
- It was caused by infected rodents that were
carrying Pasteurella pestis." Its an infectious
disease that is transmitted when the infected
rodent comes in contact with human beings. The
plague was brought on usually by a rat or flea
bite. - The plague originated on the northern coast of
the Black Sea where Indians had trading colonies.
Often in the winter the plague came about because
small rodents were looking for warm places to
live and they chose peoples home. That whole
family would be infected with the plague, and
sooner or later the whole village or town would
be infected. - The Black Plague was responsible for millions of
deaths. Most of the deaths recorded were in
Europe.
22Who or what was effected by the plague?
- The plague affected people on the northern coast
of the Black sea. In 1346 it had reached Crimea
near Turkey. Once the disease had reached Turkey
and the Mediterranean it then went into the rest
of Europe, but it had taken on a more aggressive
form. - It reached Sicily in 1346, Italy in early 1347,
and towards the end of 1347 was in Marseilles,
France. In 1348 it attacked Spain and spread
throughout Germany and France. Early that same
year the disease came to London, by 1349 was in
Oxford and spread throughout England where it was
present until 1359. Scotland was affected
somewhat later. It was carried by rats on ships. - It is estimated the roughly about 25 million
people died from the Black plague.
23Symptoms of the plague
- The symptoms were described as convulsions
followed by a rise of temperature, with vomiting,
headache, giddiness, intolerance to light, pain
in the lower abdomen, back and limbs,
sleeplessness, apathy and delirium. The body
temperature varied greatly from 101º-107º but
fell two or three degrees on the second or third
day. - The headache was described as splitting and the
deliriousness similar to the DTs (delirium
tremens), resulting from extreme drunkenness. The
eyes became red the tongue swelled and became
covered with a white fur except on the tip. Later
the tongue became dry and the fur turned yellow
or brown. - Constipation was the rule but there might be
diarrhea an even worse sign. A characteristic
symptom in severe cases was that the patient
appeared dazed and stupid, staggered and had
slurred speech. - The patient might die within 24 hours, but more
commonly death occurred on the second or third
day. Recovery was very rare.
24The effects
- In Europe is plague was known as the black
death", because of the discoloration of the skin,
and the black tumors that occurred on the second
day of the plague. The tumors were mostly in the
groin area, in most cases the person would die
with in 24 hours. - The plague was also know as the poor plague
because the first ones occurred in poorer parts
of the towns.
25Ring around the rosy connected to the plague?
- The childs song Ring around the rosy is said
to have a connection to the plague - Ring around the rosy Rose-colored areas of
skin. - Pocket full of posies- Sweet-smelling flowers
that those tending the sick would carry to ward
off the stench of disease. - Ashes ashes- Impending death (or the sneezing
and coughing of the plague). - All fall down- Death.
26What was done to help stop it?
- Efforts were made to stop the plague from
spreading towns blockaded themselves, turning
away travelers and refugees, but all it took for
it to spread was one person to slip by. - In the countryside it tended to work in pockets,
missing some villages altogether and wiping out
most of the population of others. - In the towns the death rate ran at about 30,
whilst some villages were abandoned, the
survivors fleeing, creating "deserted villages".
27Outlandish cures
- 1. Sit next to a blazing hot fire (as the Pope
did) right through the hot summer of 1348. - 2. Live in a house sheltered from the wind, and
close all the doors and windows. - 3. "The swellings should be softened with figs
and cooked onions mixed with yeast and butter."
Guy de Chaulliac - 4. "Toads should be thoroughly dried in the sun,
then laid on the boil. The toad will swell and
draw the poison into its own body. When it is
full, it should be thrown away and a new one
applied." (A doctor's advice)5. "All human
excrement and other filth lying in the city is to
be removed." Letter from Edward III to the Lord
Mayor of London, 1349.6. "Consume a medicine
made from boiled onions and the gall bladder of a
hare." (Another doctor's advice)
28What could have been done to prevent this?
- If the countries that were effected had any idea
that the Black Plague would be moving their way,
and how it was contracted the could have been a
few things they could of done to prevent it. They
couldve tried to keep the rodent population
down, have tighter security from the effected
places not letting the people effected into other
places that had yet to experience the plague. - Even today there is no real cure for the black
plague.
29Who could help those who were effected?
- For the people who were struck by this disease
there really wasnt much that could be done for
them, since there was no real cure for it. - For the family and friends that had a loved one
that had been stricken with the plague all they
could do is wait, and pray that their loved one
would hopefully pull through it.
30Conclusions
- Infectious diseases play a role in the post
natural disaster period - These diseases will vary depending on many
factors like wealth, climate, geography, etc.
31Conclusions
- Early recognition of certain diseases in disaster
setting is important to nip it in the bud - Travellers should know where they are going and
what is endemic in that area. Make sure you get
all proper medical needles before travel to areas
with these diseases. - http//www.powershow.com/view/5646a-NGVlM/Insects_
as_Disease_Vectors_powerpoint_ppt_presentation - HowStuffWorks Videos "Superswarm Locust Plagues"