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1
Preparing Our Communities
  • Welcome!

2
Faculty Disclosure
  • For Continuing Medical Education (CME) purposes
    as required by the American Medical Association
    (AMA) and other continuing education credit
    authorizing organizations
  • In order to assure the highest quality of CME
    programming, the AMA requires that faculty
    disclose any information relating to a conflict
    of interest or potential conflict of interest
    prior to the start of an educational activity.
  • The teaching faculty for the BDLS course offered
    today have no relationships / affiliations
    relating to a possible conflict of interest to
    disclose. Nor will there be any discussion of
    off label usage during this course.

3
Public Health Aspects of Disasters
  • Chapter 8

4
Faculty Disclosure
  • For Continuing Medical Education (CME) purposes
    as required by the American Medical Association
    (AMA) and other continuing education credit
    authorizing organizations
  • In order to assure the highest quality of CME
    programming, the AMA requires that faculty
    disclose any information relating to a conflict
    of interest or potential conflict of interest
    prior to the start of an educational activity.
  • The teaching faculty for the BDLS course offered
    today have no relationships / affiliations
    relating to a possible conflict of interest to
    disclose. Nor will there be any discussion of
    off label usage during this course.

5
Objectives
  • Define Public Health.
  • Discuss the Goals of a Public Health System.
  • Describe the Public Health role in an emergency.
  • Identify the disaster planning phases.
  • Discuss emergency public health measures.
  • Discuss Federal, State, and Local Powers and
    jurisdictional issues, and licensing requirements
    regarding disaster response.
  • Define the roles in an Incident Command System.
  • Identify the key elements of a communications
    strategy.
  • Discuss the 1918 Influenza epidemic as a model
    for pandemic flu preparedness.
  • Discuss the public health response to
    Bioterrorism.

6
  • The Public Health System
  • - an Overview

7
What is public health?
  • Health services concerned with threats to the
    overall health of a community based on population
    health analysis.
  • Generally includes
  • surveillance and control of infectious disease
  • promotion of healthy behaviors among members of
    the community.
  • An effort organized by society to protect,
    promote, and restore the peoples health during a
    disaster.

8
The fundamental obligations of agencies
responsible for public health are to
  • Prevent epidemics and the spread of disease
  • Protect against environmental hazards
  • Prevent injuries
  • Promote and encourage healthy behaviors and
    mental health
  • Respond to disasters and assist communities in
    recovery and
  • Assure the quality and accessibility of health
    services
  • - Especially for those who are effected by
    disasters but are not casualties themselves.

9
The Public Health System
  • Goals
  • Identify health risks in the community
  • Maintain a safe and healthful environment
  • Detect, investigate, and prevent the spread of
    disease
  • Promote healthy lifestyles
  • Perform and report epidemiology studies
  • The study of factors affecting the health and
    illness of populations that serves as the
    foundation and logic of interventions made in the
    interest of public health and preventive medicine.

10
The Public Health System
  • Essential Public Health Services
  • Monitor health status of the population
  • Investigate health problems and hazards
  • Develop policies and plans for responding to
    emergencies
  • Health surveillance and epidemiological
    investigations.
  • Enforce public health and safety laws and
    regulations
  • Provide health services during a public health
    emergency
  • Assure a competent workforce to respond to public
    health emergencies
  • Evaluate health services for public health
    emergencies

11
The Public Health System
  • Core Functions
  • Prevent epidemics and spread of disease
  • Protect against environmental hazards
  • Prevent injury
  • Promote healthy behaviors and mental health
  • Respond to disasters and assist communities in
    recovery
  • Assure quality and accessibility of health
    services

12
Public Health Surveillance and Epidemiological
Investigation
  • Basic Requirements to implement a surveillance
    system
  • Trained personnel
  • The key to this is adequate personnel who are
    properly trained.
  • Reporting systems
  • Laboratory capacity
  • There must be a standardized method for data
    collection.
  • Communication links
  • Legal framework
  • Health care facilities

13
Outbreak Response
  • Specimen Tracking/Cycle Time Reduction
  • Expanded Surveillance/Field
  • Response Assignments and Tracking
  • Public Health and Clinical Capacity
  • Alerting Cascades/Worker Force Availability
  • Stockpile Supplies (locations, types)
  • Notifications (Public Health and other Officials)

14
Public Health and Disaster Planning
  • Disaster Planning Phases
  • Predisaster or Warning Phase
  • To be useful, you must be ready
  • To be ready, you must be trained
  • To be trained, you must plan ahead
  • Interdisaster Phase
  • Impact Phase
  • Emergency Relief Phase
  • Reconstruction or Rehabilitation Phase

15
Public Health and Disaster Planning
  • Plans unique to regional and local resources and
    needs
  • Planning objectives
  • Hazard vulnerability analysis
  • Emergency response plan
  • Mitigation activities (prepare)
  • Implement response plan
  • Mobilize resources for recovery

16
Public Health Management of Disasters
  • Environmental Health
  • Communicable Disease Control
  • Emergency public health measures
  • Quarantine- states police powers
  • Isolation, vaccination/prophylaxis
  • Seizure of property
  • Travel restriction
  • Disposal of corpses
  • Mental Health Services

17
Public Health Laws
Public Health Emergency Law
18
State and Local Powers
  • 10th Amendment
  • The powers not delegated to the United States by
    the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the
    States, are reserved for the States respectively,
    or to the people.
  • NEMAC National Emergency Management Assistance
    Compact
  • Public Health Laws
  • Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (MSEHPA)
  • Declaration of a Public Health Emergency
  • Public Health Powers

19
Public Health Disaster Response
  • State
  • Broad Responsibilities
  • State Public Health Personnel
  • State Hospitals
  • State Police/State EMS
  • National Guard called up by the Governor
  • Funding
  • State tax revenues
  • Federal grants and contracts

20
Quarantine
A collective action for the common good
Public good
Individual liberties
Paramount to meet needs of individuals infected
and exposed
21
Public Health Disaster Response
  • Local
  • Frontline of public health
  • Local Public Health Personnel
  • Municipal Hospitals
  • Police/Fire/EMS
  • Responsibilities
  • Funding
  • Local taxes
  • State and federal grants

22
Federal Disaster Assistance Process
  • Stafford Act
  • Authorizes the president to direct ANY federal
    resource for assistance
  • Federal Response Plan (FRP)
  • Provides for Coordination and Lead Roles Among
    Federal Agencies
  • Activation of the FRP
  • Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
  • Emergency Support Functions (ESFs)
  • Department of Homeland Security
  • Initial National Response Plan (NRP)
  • National Incident Management System (NIMS)
  • National Disaster Medical System (NDMS)

23
Public Health Disaster Response
  • Federal Employees-Full Time and Surge
  • Public Health Service
  • National Disaster Medical System (NDMS)
  • Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
  • Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
  • Department of Defense/ Army
  • National Guard (if Federalized)

24
Public Health Service
  • Public Health Service Commissioned Corps
  • and Reserve Corps
  • Federal employees in other jobs activated
    for response to public health threats.
  • Deployed through HHS.

25
National Disaster Medical System (NDMS)
  • Federal, state and local health professionals
  • Includes medical (DMAT), nursing (NNRT),
    veterinary (VMAT), mortuary (DMORT) pharmacy
    (NPRT)
  • Trained/equipped for catastrophic health events
  • When activated, become intermittent federal
    employees
  • Hired in accordance with civil service laws
  • Activated through DHS/FEMA

26
Department of Veterans Affairs
  • Under Authority from the Stafford Act
  • VA hospital facilities and personnel can be
    directed to assist state and local emergency
    response efforts.
  • Provide for Medical Emergency Preparedness
    Centers.
  • Provide hospital care and medical services in an
    emergency or disaster.

27
Environmental Protection Agency
  • Specialized chem/enviro response teams
  • CERCLA/Superfund authority provides for long term
    cleanup
  • Activated through National Response Plan
  • Emergency Support Functions
  • requested through either FEMA/DHS or can act
    independently under its Environmental Protection
    Authority

28
Department of Defense (DoD)
  • Major DoD deployments in emergency
  • Situations coordinated through DHS/FEMA
  • DoD maintains liaisons with DHS/FEMA to assist in
    identifying military assets to assist in major
    disasters and emergencies

29
Emergency Response To Terrorism
  • All sites will be characterized by multiple
    overlapping, simultaneous investigations
  • Clinical (Finding Cases)
  • Epidemiologic (Disease Tracking)
  • Forensic (Crime/Attribution investigation)
  • Environmental (worker safety/clean up)
  • Linked to broader National effort

30
The National Response Plan
  • Establishes a comprehensive all-hazards approach
    to enhance the ability
  • of the United States to
  • Save lives and protect the health and safety of
    the public, responders, and recovery workers
  • Ensure security of the homeland
  • Prevent an imminent incident, including acts of
    terrorism, from occurring
  • Protect and restore critical infrastructure and
    key resources
  • Conduct law enforcement investigations to resolve
    the incident, apprehend the perpetrators, and
    collect and preserve evidence for prosecution
    and/or attribution
  • Protect property and mitigate damages and impacts
    to individuals, communities, and the environment
    and
  • Facilitate recovery of individuals, families,
    businesses, governments, and the environment.

31
Practice of Medicine During Disasters
  • Jurisdictional Issues
  • A Federal Employee (full-time or temporary)
    licensed in any state is permitted to practice
    medicine in any other state.
  • Licensure and Liability of Medical Volunteers
  • Subject to mutual aid agreements, Interstate
    Compacts, and individual State laws.
  • NRP and Most state agencies have a Volunteer
    Management Annex covering verification of skills,
    licensing, privileges and credentialing for out
    of state volunteers.
  • Good Samaritan Statutes
  • Provisions/liability exposure varies by state.
  • Very low liability exposure Volunteers,
    government employees.
  • Liability persons receiving compensation - not
    government employees.
  • Compensation for Emergency Care
  • The federal government is responsible for
    workers compensation, and salaries of its
    employees.
  • When mutual aid agreements are enacted,
    compensation provisions are included.

32
Jurisdictional Issues
  • State and federal emergencies declared
  • Joint Field Office established
  • Principal Federal Official
  • Federal and State Coordinating Officers
  • HHS coordinating all federal health response
    actions
  • under ESF 8
  • State health counterpart coordinating state
    health response actions
  • NOTE Onsite Incident Commander retains
    authority has system to obtain resources

33
Licensure Issues
  • If a person is licensed in responding state,
    the person shall be deemed licensed in
    requesting state.
  • Unless requesting governor orders otherwise.

34
Liability During Disaster Response
  • Liability is limited
  • Most states limit liability for actions in
    emergencies to gross negligence or willful
    misconduct.
  • Federal law preempts state laws.
  • No liability for volunteer of any
    non-governmental
  • organization or government if
  • Work performed within volunteers scope of
    duties
  • Volunteer is properly licensed
  • Volunteer had no criminal or willful misconduct

35
Minimizing Liability ExampleState Good
Samaritan Laws Florida
  • A person is not liable for civil damages arising
    out of care or treatment, in emergency
    situations, including declared emergencies
  • IF care is provided
  • gratuitously and in good faith
  • without objection of the injured victim or
    victims thereof, acting as an ordinary
    reasonably prudent person would have acted under
    the same or similar circumstances
  • Protection also extended for actions coordinated
    with organized emergency management teams and
    agencies.

36
Model Emergency Powers Act
  • Allows
  • Public health authority may waive any and all
    licensing
  • requirements, permits, or fees required by the
    State Code
  • and applicable orders, rules or regulations for
    health care
  • providers from other jurisdictions.

37
Protecting Privacy of Disaster Victims
  • HIPAA
  • Disclosure for Public Health Activities. xix
    The Privacy Rule permits the
  • disclosure of PHI to facilitate public health
    activity
  • (1) preventing or controlling disease, injury,
    or disability, including, but not limited to, the
    reporting of disease, injury, vital events such
    as birth or death, and the conduct of public
    health surveillance, public health
    investigations, and public health interventions
  • (2) to notify individuals who may have been
    exposed to a communicable disease or may
    otherwise be at risk of contracting or spreading
    a disease or condition, if the covered entity or
    public health authority is authorized by law to
    notify such person as necessary in the conduct of
    a public health intervention or investigation.

38
Incident Command System
  • A management system used to organize emergency
    response.
  • Offers a scalable response to an emergency
    (incident) of any magnitude
  • Provides a common framework within which people
    can work together.
  • Eliminates the "who's in charge" problem.

39
Incident Command System
  • Incident Commander (IC)
  • the single person in charge
  • Finance Section Chief
  • tracking incident related costs, personnel
    records, requisitions, and administrating
    procurement contracts required by Logistics.
  • Logistics Section Chief
  • providing all resources, services, and support
    required by the incident.
  • Operations Section Chief
  • directing all actions to meet the incident
    objectives.

40
Incident Command System
  • Planning Section Chief
  • collection and display of incident information,
    primarily consisting of the status of all
    resources and overall status of the incident.
  • Public Information Officer
  • serves as the conduit for information to internal
    and external stakeholders, including the media or
    other organizations seeking information directly
    from the incident or event.
  • Safety Officer
  • monitors safety conditions and develops measures
    for assuring the safety of all assigned
    personnel.
  • Liaison Officer
  • serves as the primary contact for supporting
    agencies assisting at an incident.

41
Emergency Communication and Public Information
Systems
  • Cellular communications
  • Amateur Ham Radio Operators
  • Internet-based communications and other computer
    resources
  • CDC Health Alert Network (HAN)
  • GIS
  • PDAs

42
Key Elements of a Communications Strategy
  • Respond quickly and accurately
  • Identify a primary person to be the voice of
    the agency or organization
  • Tell the truth but resist giving every detail
  • The face that is shown to the media must be one
    of concern and compassion
  • Appreciate the role and efforts of the media in
    emergency management.

43
Public Health Models
  • Influenza 1918-1919
  • 20 Million Deaths Worldwide
  • Undiscovered virus at the time
  • Mass casualty in health facilities (needs
    exceeded resources)
  • Pandemic Flu 2006-2007
  • The assumptions, based largely on the 1918
    influenza epidemic, are being used throughout the
    federal government to define a severe case
    scenario for a pandemic flu outbreak.

44
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45
Global Influenza Surveillance
  • WHO global (Human) surveillance network
  • 112 sites in 80 countries to detect new flu
  • Major Collaborating Centers
  • Atlanta, London, Melbourne, Tokyo
  • Animal Surveillance (e.g., Birds, others)
  • Strategic Readiness Concerns
  • Early detection Immunization Clinical Surge

46
Bioterrorism
  • The intentional use of infectious agents, or
    germs, to cause illness.
  • Made a national priority.
  • The federal Centers for Disease Control and
    Prevention has worked with state and local health
    departments to identify and to respond to
    bioterrorism for several years.
  • The public health response to bioterrorism
    includes medications, medical supplies, and if
    necessary, vaccines to protect an affected
    community.

47
The Bioterrorism Act of 2002
  • The events of Sept. 11, 2001, reinforced the need
    to enhance the security of the United States.
  • Congress responded by passing the Public Health
    Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and
    Response Act of 2002.
  • President Bush signed it into law June 12, 2002.

48
Public Health Response to Bioterrorism
  • Requires communication and coordination with
    first responders and law enforcement officials.
  • State and local health departments should work
    with these groups to ensure that local disaster
    preparedness plans address bioterrorism.
  • Planning for Response to Threats
  • define the roles of each agency, including
    protection of first responders
  • groups should be tested through simulations.

49
Bioterrorism Jurisdiction
  • FBI has jurisdiction for bioterrorism response
    but recognizes the need to conduct epidemiologic
    investigations, define at-risk groups, and
    rapidly implement potentially life-saving medical
    and public health responses.
  • When bioterrorism alleging use of anthrax or
    other agents occurs, the local emergency response
    system should be activated by dialing 911 in most
    communities in communities without 911 systems,
    local law enforcement authorities should be
    notified.
  • Police, fire, emergency medical services (EMS),
    and hazardous materials units (HAZMAT) (i.e.,
    first responders) will respond sent to the scene
  • The local FBI field office and local and state
    public health authorities also should be
    notified.

50
Bioterrorism Planning
  • The Anthrax Model
  • Anthrax is an acute infectious disease caused by
    the spore-forming bacterium B. anthracis.
  • It occurs most frequently as an epizootic or
    enzootic disease of herbivores (e.g., cattle,
    goats, and sheep), which acquire spores from
    direct contact with contaminated soil.
  • Humans usually become infected through contact
    with or ingestion or inhalation of B. anthracis
    spores from infected animals or their products
    (e.g., goat hair).
  • Human-to-human transmission has not been
    documented.

51
Public Health Response to Bioterrorism
  • Although all the threats alleging use of anthrax
    described in this report were hoaxes, they
    demonstrate settings where bioterrorism can occur
    and the potential public health impact.
  • These threats required prompt action by health,
    law enforcement, and laboratory personnel.
  • Coordination and communication across agencies
    are necessary to protect the public and first
    responders from credible biologic warfare and
    bioterrorism agents such as anthrax.

52
Bioterrorism Response
  • FBI will coordinate the collection of evidence
    (e.g., letters, packages, or air-handling system
    samples) and deliver materials to an FBI or US
    Department of Defense laboratory for testing.
  • To guide decision-making, test results
    identifying B. anthracis should be available as
    soon as possible, at least within 24-48 hours.
  • Efforts are under way to assess and enhance the
    capabilities of state and local health department
    laboratories to fulfill the need for rapid
    analysis.
  • Planning for laboratory testing should be part of
    bioterrorism preparedness by state and local
    public health, law enforcement, and first
    responder authorities in consultation with
    federal officials

53
Bioterrorism Response
  • Public health officials, working with law
    enforcement and first response personnel, should
    determine the need for decontamination and
    postexposure prophylaxis.
  • In most of the recent hoaxes purporting anthrax
    exposure, immediate postexposure decontamination
    and prophylaxis have not been indicated because
    of the lack of credibility of the threat.
  • Public health officials should collect contact
    information for potentially exposed persons for
    notification of laboratory results or other
    follow-up.
  • Potentially exposed persons should be given
    information about the signs and symptoms of
    illnesses associated with the biologic agent and
    about whom to contact and where to go should they
    develop illness.

54
Bioterrorism Response
  • Recommendations for Postexposure Prophylaxis
  • Postexposure prophylaxis for exposure to B.
    anthracis consists of chemoprophylaxis and
    vaccination
  • Oral fluoroquinolones are the drugs of choice for
    adults, including pregnant women
  • If fluoroquinolones are not available or are
    contraindicated, doxycycline is acceptable.
  • Prophylaxis should continue until B. anthracis
    exposure has been excluded.

55
Bioterrorism Response
  • Decontamination
  • If decontamination is appropriate, persons should
    remove their clothing and personal effects, place
    all items in plastic bags, and shower using
    copious quantities of soap and water.
  • Plastic bags with personal effects should be
    labeled clearly with the owner's name, contact
    telephone number, and inventory of the bag's
    contents.
  • Personal items may be kept as evidence in a
    criminal trial or returned to the owner if the
    threat is unsubstantiated.
  • For incidents involving possibly contaminated
    letters, the environment in direct contact with
    the letter or its contents should be
    decontaminated with a 0.5 hypochlorite solution
    (i.e., one part household bleach to 10 parts
    water) following a crime scene investigation.
  • Personal effects may be decontaminated similarly.

56
Bioterrorism Response
  • CDC and other offices in the US Department of
    Health and Human Services are working with state
    and local health departments, federal agencies,
    and nongovernmental organizations to improve the
    public health capacity to address bioterrorism
    and develop locality-specific response plans.
  • CDC also can assist public health officials with
    decision-making if a threat occurs alleging the
    use of a biologic agent.

57
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