Title: CDC Region 3 Bio-Emergency Health Official/Elected Official In-Service
1CDC Region 3 Bio-Emergency Health
Official/Elected Official In-Service
- Linda Drey, Health Planner
2004
2Objectives
- Describe the role of local public health in Iowa.
- Identify the role of the local board of health.
- Identify relationships to the Iowa Department of
Public Health, local board of supervisors, local
county attorney, and other partners. - Understand the aspects of bio-terrorism and the
role/responsibilities of local public health in
the event of a bio-emergency. - Become familiar with CDC Bioterrorism grant
requirements for FY 03-04..
3Local Public Healths Role
- Protecting the Health
- of the Public!
- Public health is responsible to safeguard the
communitys health through assessment, policy
development and assurance.
4Public Healths Impact
- Public health is not a collection of programs for
the poor. - Has public health affected your life today?
- Public health affects everyone who drinks public
drinking water, eats in a restaurant, buys milk,
has an elderly relative who needs home care,
needs emergency medical services, wants to avoid
getting sick from an infectious disease, and is
concerned about preparedness for natural or
intentional disaster.
5Public Health vs. Hospital
- Local Public Health
- Is responsible for protecting and safeguarding
the health of all people within its jurisdiction - Public health touches every persons life every
day - Promotes physical and mental health
- Prevents disease and injury
- Prevents epidemics and spread of disease
- Promote healthy behaviors
- Respond to disasters
- Assures the quality and accessibility of health
services for all
6Public Health vs. Hospital
- Hospital/Individual Provider
- Focus is on providing care to specific
individuals seeking care for an illness/injury - Makes decisions that are best for the respective
patient and not necessarily the general public - No emphasis/responsibility for the health and
welfare of the general public - Not required to provide treatment to all
individuals requesting care with a few exceptions
(ERs, etc.)
7Core Public Health Functions
- Assessment
- Policy Development
- Assurance
8Core Public Health Functions/Essential Services
- Assessment
- Monitor health status
- Diagnose and investigate health problems and
health hazards in the community - Evaluate the effectiveness, accessibility, and
quality of personnel and population-based health
services
9Core Public Health Functions/Essential Services
- Policy Development
- Develop policies and plans that support
individual and community health efforts. - Enforce laws and regulations that protect health
and ensure safety. - Research for new insights and innovative
solutions to health problems.
10Core Public Health Functions/Essential Services
- Assurance
- Link people to needed personal health services
and assure the provision of health care when
otherwise unavailable. - Assure a competent public health and personal
health care workforce. - Inform, educate and empower people about health
issues. - Mobilize community partnerships to identify and
solve health problems.
11For Local Communities
- Public health is an economic issue, because
healthy workers are productive and a good public
health system attracts business. - Public health is an education issue because
healthy children learn. - Public health is the front line defense for the
publics health promotion and protection.
12Local Public Health System Public Health
Providers
- Local Boards Of Health (County/City/District)
- WIC agencies
- Maternal Child Health (MCH) agencies
- Visiting Nurse Service (VNS) agencies
- And others..perhaps MANY others...
1310 Greatest Advances in PH
- Vaccinations
- Safer workplaces
- Safer and healthier food
- Vehicle safety
- Control of infectious diseases
- Family planning
- Advances in treatment and prevention of heart
disease and stroke - Decrease in tobacco use
- Better care for mothers and their babies
- Fluoridation of drinking water
14Local Boards of Health History
- In 1866 the Local Health Law was adopted.
- Designated mayor and town council or township
trustee as LBOH. - LBOH had authority to establish regulations for
public health and safety, control nuisances, and
regulate sources of filth and causes of sickness
in communities.
151967 New Local Health Act
- Chapter 137 of the Code of Iowa
- Each county required to establish a BOH - one
member had to be a physician licensed by the
State of Iowa. - BOS to appoint other members.
- A city with a population of 25,000 could
establish a city board of health. - Counties and cities were also allowed to form
district boards of health.
16LBOH Power and Jurisdiction
- Chapter 137of the Code of Iowa
- 5 members, one must be an Iowa licensed
physician - The BOH has autonomy over public health matters
within the county. (IA Code137.5 137.6 137.7) - Can write rules and employ persons for the
discharge of its duties.
17LBOH Power Jurisdiction Cont.
- Boards of Supervisors have little authority over
public health matters. - The Board of Supervisors role is three fold
- appoint board of health members
- determine county funding portion of the local
health budget and - approve regulations adopted by board of health
18LBOH Roles Responsibilities
- IA Administrative Code 641-Ch.77
- Requires local BOH to carry out the three core
functions and ten essential public health
services. - Required to meet at least quarterly.
- Required to comply with open meeting laws.
- LBOH must report to the IDPH on certain
activities defined in IAC 641-77.5.
19Local Boards of Health
- Powers of Local Boards of Health
- Refer to LBOH Guidebook page 9
- Legal Responsibility of Local Board of Health
- Refer to LBOH Guidebook page 10
- Working with the County Board of Supervisors
- Refer to LBPH Guidebook page 12...
20Local Boards of Health in Iowa
- 99 county Boards of Health
- 1 District Health Department
- Siouxland District Health Department
- 2 City Boards of Health
- Council Bluffs
- Ottumwa
21Bioterrorism/Bio-emergencies are Different
- Medical and public health systems are usually
first to detect bioterrorism. - A delay is likely between the release of the
agent and the knowledge that the occurrence is a
bioterrorist act. - A short window of opportunity exists between the
first cases and the second wave. - Public health officials must determine that an
attack occurred, identify the organism, and
prevent more casualties.
22Local Public Health Bio-Emergency Planning
- Need to build the infrastructure of local public
health across Iowa and the nation. - In Iowa, the IDPH is the lead public health
agency and coordinates the CDC Iowa Public Health
Cooperative Agreement (public health BT grant) - Each local health department charged with
developing a bio-emergency plan by Aug. 2004.
23Public Health Infrastructure
PublicHealthResponse
- Bioterrorism
- Emerging Infections
- Other Public Hlth Programs
Essential Scientific Capabilities
Basic Infrastructure
Reference Public Health Practice Program Office
(PHPPO), CDC, 1999.
24BT Core Capacities 10/15/01
- Mission
- To protect the publics health and safety by
developing the capacity of state and local public
health systems to prepare for and respond to a
bioterrorist act.
25BT Core Capacities Framework
- Surveillance and Epidemiologic Investigation
- Identification
- Communication
- Mobilization
- Public Health Interventions
26BT Core Capacities Framework
- Goals
- Pre-Event Objectives
- Event Objectives
- Indicators (pre-event and event)
- Planning/Policy Indicators
- Workforce/Training Indicators
- Evaluation/Quality Indicators
27BT Core Capacities Example
- Mobilization
- Pre-Event Objective Identify organizations that
comprise the public health response system and
integrate preparedness activities with partners - P/P plans that define roles and responsibilities
- W/T train staff in response role within larger
emergency response system - E/Q review plans periodically and adjust
28Activation of Federal Assistance
- Major disaster
- Internal local and State resources
- State resources exhausted
- Governor requests President to declare disaster
- Federal Assistance- based on severity and need
- FEMA may request DOD or National Guard
29Federal Response Plan
- FBI leads on information release I crisis
management - FEMA leads on information release in consequence
management - Transfer from the FBI to FEMA by Attorney General
- Core Federal Responses
- DOJ/FBI DOE FEMA
- DOD EPA HHS
30Health and Human Services (HHS) Provides
- Medical supplies, drugs and vaccinations (SNS)
- Regulatory follow up (e.g. FDA)
- Outbreak/disease threat assessment
- Onsite safety
- Mass fatality management
- Technical support, personnel and equipment
- Disease detectives
- Agent identification collection and testing of
samples - Medical management
31CDC Bioterrorism Grant 03-04
- Focus Area A Planning Assessment
- Focus Area B Surveillance Epidemiology
- Focus Area C Laboratory Biological Agents
- Focus Area D Laboratory Chemical Agents
- Focus Area E Health Alert Network/IT
- Focus Area F Risk Communication
- Focus Area G Education Training
- Strategic National Stockpile (SNS)
- Smallpox
32Funding Formula for LPHA
- Base aware per LPHA 30
- Population 40
- Critical Assets 15
- Agricultural Value 15
33Funding
of Total Funding Total Funding
Local public health agencies 21 2,644,609
CDC Regions (6) 20 2,504,515
IDPH 21 2,669,579
Shared Capacity 21 2,594,892
UHL 17 2,188,378
TOTAL 100 12,601,973
34LPHA Grant Responsibilities
- By July 15, 2004 complete county bio-emergency
plan and submit template checklist to IDPH. - By July 15, 2004 complete mass dispensing plan,
policies and procedures for smallpox/oral
prophylaxis and submit checklist to IDPH. - By July 15, 2004 submit improvement plan for
reportable disease surveillance system for your
county to IDPH.
35LPHA Progress Report
- Two progress reports are due to IDPH from each
local public health agency as a part of the CDC
grant. - Due April 10, 2004
- September 10, 2004
36LPHA Regional Responsibilities
- Submit county information for Regional Resource
Directory for reports due Jan. 5, April 1, and
July 1. - Submit the of trained staff in advanced
epidemiology/surveillance for Aug. 1 report. - Submit the of trained staff in EPI-INFO for
Aug. 1 report.
37Regional Grant Reports
- As a member of Region 3 (16-county area of
northwest Iowa) each county must submit requested
information in addition to what is asked for in
the regional resource directory for a regional
report compiled by the regional planner. - The report is due
- April 10, 2004
- September 10, 2004
38 WELCOME TO BIOTERRORISM BASICS
39Objectives
- Upon completion of the course, learners should be
able to - Define terrorism using the B-NICE model
- Define the role of public health in dealing with
a terrorism attack - List three or more messages that should be sent
to the general public regarding terrorism
40Terrorism
- Terrorism is the unlawful use of force or
violence against persons or property to
intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian
population, or any segment thereof, in
furtherance of political or social objectives. - FBI Definition from 28 CFR Section 0.85.
41PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT
of terrorintrusive thoughts, nightmares and
sleeping difficulties, anxiety or fear,
alienation from people, jumpiness, emotional
numbness and problems with social relationships
42Objectives of Terrorism
- Bring down a government or regime
- Attack those who attack their religion
- Cause a Change!!!
43Countermeasures to Terror
- Awareness of terrorism objectives
- Deny the objective of the attack
- President Bush
- Keep shopping, keep traveling
- Subsidies for airlines, insurance industry to
keep working
44Public Healths Role in a Bio-Emergency
- PREPARE
- RESPOND
- MITIGATE
- RECOVER
45Why Iowa?
- Nearly 1000 interstate bridges
- More than 100 dams
- Greatest concentration of hog lots in the
- nation
- Critical rail links
- Over 3000 miles of pipelines (natural gas,
- gasoline, etc.)
- Iowa is a symbol of stability
- Not In My Back Yard Syndrome
46Types of Terrorism B-NICE
- Biologic
- Nuclear
- Incendiary
- Chemical
- Explosive
47Bioterrorism
- Since 1985, the number of terrorist incidents
involving the threatened or actual use of
chemical, biological, radiologic, or nuclear
materials has risen sharply (Tucker, 1999) - The threat to the nation from biologic weapons is
no longer a debate issue. (Russell, 1997)
48Why Bioterrorism?
- Poor mans nuclear bomb
- Cheap
- Easily available
- Compact
- Deadly
- Psychological Impact
- Stealthy
49Ease of Dissemination
50Mortality Rates
51CDC Assistance
Local level needs CDC help to identify Category B
and Category C diseases/agents.
52 Describe the public health role in emergency
response in a range of emergencies that might
arise.
Public Health Staff Roles
- Describe the chain of command in emergency
response - Identify and locate the agency emergency response
plan
53Public Health Staff Roles Cont.
- Describe your functional role in an emergency
situation - Demonstrate correct use of all communication
equipment used in an emergency
- Describe communication role(s) in emergency
response - Recognize unusual events that might indicate an
emergency and describe appropriate action
54Public Healths Message to the Community
55Preparation
- Communities prepare for a number of disasters
including - Ice Storms
- Tornadoes
- Chemical spills
- And nowterrorism
56Be Alert and Stay Calm!
- Report suspicious activity
- Use common sense
- Dont approach
- Write down a description
- First responders are trained to protect lives and
property. - Stay tuned to local radio stations for emergency
messages.
57Are You Prepared Personally?
- Have a family emergency plan that includes
- Phone tree or notification plan for all family
members. - Identify a family meeting place
- Know school and workplace procedures
- Battery powered radio, flashlights and batteries
- First aid kit and other special needs
- Basic supplies for 72 hours
58Actions You Can Take
- You as a member of the public health community
may play a critical role. - Be prepared to identify possible incidents.
- Be prepared to respond appropriately and rapidly.
- If a bio-emergency happens, it wont be business
as usual for any member of the public health
team.
59Contact Information
- Linda Drey Health Planning Development
Coordinator
Siouxland District Health
Department Phone
712-279-6119
Cell 712-490-5937
Fax
712-255-02604 - Kevin Grieme Health Planner
Siouxland District Health Department
Phone 712-279-6119
Cell
712-898-5176
Fax 712-255-02604