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Foreign Animal Disease Outbreak Planning for Zoos AZFA Conference 2016

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Presentation on theme: "Foreign Animal Disease Outbreak Planning for Zoos AZFA Conference 2016"— Presentation transcript:

1 Foreign Animal Disease Outbreak Planning for Zoos AZFA Conference 2016

2 Foreign Animal Diseases
Diseases not currently found in the United States 15 Significant Ones Classical Swine Fever Exotic Newcastle Disease Rinderpest

3 Avian Influenza & Foot and Mouth Disease

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7 A Range of Response Plans

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9 Endangered Species of high genetic and conservation value

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11 California Exotic Newcastle Outbreak 2002

12 Henry Doorly Zoo/ Wildlife Safari Park
Avian Influenza (AI) Response Plan 2006

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14 Public Health USDA Fusion Center SZS Media Public SAHO

15 June 6, 2012

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18 June 11, 2013

19 Omaha Tabletop Planning for Feathers, Flu and You

20 April 2, 2014 Incident Command System and National Incident Management System Training

21 zoo staff from all levels
ICS and NIMS Training Approximately 60 zoo staff from all levels

22 Incident Command System Language JIC, Incident Commander PIO, Operations Section, Planning Section, Strike Teams, Span of Control, Task force Scalability, Section Chief Safety Officer, Unified Command IAPs, ICP, Staging Area, Camp, JOC, MACC Compensation Claims Unit, Demobilization Unit, Liaison Officer

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24 Nebraska Department of Agriculture State Veterinarians Office and Yvonne Nadler ZAHP Fusion Center

25 April 22, 2014

26 Premise Day 1 Backyard Chicken Flock in Omaha Veterinarian near Zoo
Respiratory symptoms- 2 sick, 13 dead Veterinarian near Zoo Contacts State Veterinarian State Response Presumptive Positive

27 Premise Day 2 Depopulation 2 remaining birds
2 new locations show up- one in wild turkeys near zoo Some Zoo birds may show symptoms- especially Madagascan Crested Ibis- Endangered

28 Premise Day 3 Zoo contacts state veterinarian
Zoo birds diagnosed presumptive positive Employees not coming to work Rumors and aggressive press Worried well over run hospitals

29 75 Participants Federal State Local State officials from 3 states
3 Other Zoos

30 Federal USDA/APHIS Veterinary Services USDA Wildlife Services
USDA/APHIS Animal Care USDA Avian Specialist FBI FEMA

31 State State Veterinarian/ Department of Agriculture
Nebraska Game and Parks Health and Human Services Nebraska Diagnostic Lab University of Nebraska Highway Patrol

32 Local County and City Emergency Coordinators Departments of Health
Omaha Police Omaha Fire Humane Society

33 Other Groups Center for Food Security- Iowa State North Dakota Iowa
South Dakota 3 Zoos

34 Outcomes Zoo not well prepared to work within an ICS More training
Established new Relationships that will help us be “In the Trailer”

35 Outcomes We recognized that the Zoo is part of a much bigger agricultural picture. Loss of sales- chickens, turkeys, BEEF! Closed borders

36 Outcomes “How would we know that?” Dealing with the Zoo- new issues
Agencies hadn’t thought too much about dealing with disease in an urban environment

37 Zoo will- Continue working with State and Federal Agencies on planning
Continue ICS training More tabletops, new scenarios

38 Objective: Be one less worry, with confidence for IC
Objective: Be one less worry, with confidence for IC. Be part of the solution, Not another problem to solve

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44 48 million birds euthanized
HPAI 48 million birds euthanized $ 1.6 Billion direct cost $ 3.3 Billion indirect

45 Zoo Responses Varied “Prioritizing animals” Covering exhibits
Draining ponds Moving birds inside “Prioritizing animals” Communication with State Veterinarian

46 Management of Facilities and Equipment is Crucial

47 Foot and Mouth Disease

48 FMD 7 Serovars plus subtypes All cloven hoofed animals Low mortality, high morbidity

49 Traditional Plan: Stamp it Out

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51 2001 Great Britain Outbreak 10 million animals $14 billion in cost
UK daily mail article recalling the 2001 FMD outbreak. 10 million animals.

52 The case against depopulation of feedlots

53 (burial trench 75 miles long)
Nebraska 5- 6 million cattle Feedlots over 150,000 (burial trench 75 miles long)

54 Air quality, water quality, etc, etc

55 Evolving new strategies for domestic animals
Composting Limited vaccination Manage to slaughter Multiple years to eradicate

56 Business Continuity for Zoos While protecting the collection Visitation

57 Controlled Access Points
CAP Iso CAP

58 Step Two: Isolation Area (shown in red)
Designate the Isolation Area: the most long-term biosecure animal confinement area in the facility Designate Isolation Area Controlled Access Point (CAP) Where PPE Biosecurity Protocols are implemented Designate Staff access path

59 Designate visitor areas
Isolation Note: Visitor and staff pathways never cross and Susceptible animals are never exposed to visitors Visitor Exhibit

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62 Managing Animal Contact Areas

63 Modeled on secure milk, secure pork, secure eggs
Secure Zoo Modeled on secure milk, secure pork, secure eggs

64 zahp.aza.org


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