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Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Shands Hospital at the University of Florida 2001.

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Presentation on theme: "Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Shands Hospital at the University of Florida 2001."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Shands Hospital at the University of Florida 2001

3 Tokyo Train Station

4 Aerial view of anthrax production facility

5 Where and when will bioterrorism hit next?

6 Biological Weapons?????

7 Bioterrorism Readiness Planning Subcommittee  Sub committee of Infection Prevention and Control Committee  Chair: Kenneth Rand, MD  Multidisciplinary Membership

8 Multidisciplinary Membership  Infection Control Staff  Hospital Epidemiologist  Physicians Infectious Disease Physicians Emergency Medicine Chief and other ER Physicians Surgeons  Emergency Department Nurse Manager  Safety Director  Public Relations  Respiratory Care  Laboratory  Facilities Operations  Public Health Administrator & other agencies  Materials Management  Administration

9 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Purpose To be a:  Reference on bioterrorism  A practical and realistic institutional response for a real or suspected bioterrorism attack  Plan that incorporates local and state health agencies recommendations  A branch of existing disaster preparedness and other emergency plans

10 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Components  Infection Control Activities  Laboratory Policies  Public Inquiry  Disease Specific Information  Appendix  FBI Field Offices  Telephone Directory of State and Territorial Public Health Directors  Relevant Websites

11 Indications of a Possible Bioterrorism Event  Unusual illness in a population  Large number of ill persons with similar disease  Large numbers of cases of unexplained diseases or death  Higher morbidity or mortality in association with a common disease or syndrome  Single case of unusual agent  No illness in persons not exposed to common ventilation system  Threat received indicating exposure

12 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Basic Premises  In a case of suspected/real bioterrorism related event or outbreak  All personnel are responsible for immediately reporting suspected event.  The Shands Disaster Plan shall be activated in conjunction with this Bioterrorism Readiness Plan.

13 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Authority to rapidly implement prevention and control measures  Administration  Director On Call  Infection Prevention and Control  Hospital Epidemiologist  Chairman  Director or designee  Safety and Security  Director or designee

14 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Communication Network Individual Shands Operator Infection Control & Safety and Security Director-On-Call Public Health Local and State Authorities ( EMS, Police, Fire Departments) FBI CDC Administration DEPTSDEPTS Public Relations

15 Maximum Containment Lab

16 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Staff Education  Initial special program to introduce plan  Video tape and module  Ongoing education incorporated into orientation and annual Infection Control and Safety programs  Bioterrorism Preparedness Drills

17 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Section I: General Recommendation for any Suspected Event  Reporting Requirements and Contact Information  Internal  External  Potential Agents  Syndrome Based  Epidemiologic Features  Patient, Visitor and Public Information  Pharmacy

18 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Section I: General Recommendation for any Suspected Event: Infection Control Practices  Isolation  Patient Placement  Patient Transport  Cleaning, Disinfection and Sterilization  Discharge Management  Post-mortem Care  Post Exposure Management  Decontamination of Patients and Environment  Prophylaxis and post-exposure management  Triage  Psychological Aspects of Bioterrorism

19 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Section I: General Recommendation for any Suspected Event: Infection Control Practices  Laboratory Support and Confirmation  Obtaining diagnostic samples  Criteria for processing  Transportation of clinical specimens  Management and handling of criminal investigation specimens

20 Bioterrorism Readiness Plan Section II: Agent Specific Recommendations  Anthrax  Botulinum Toxin  Plague  Smallpox  Ricin

21 Anthrax

22  Transmission:  Inhalation  Ingestion  Skin contact  Associated with infected animals such as sheep, goats, and cattle (Woolsorter’s disease)  No person to person transmission of inhalation anthrax  Direct exposure to cutaneous anthrax lesions may result in secondary cutaneous infections

23 Anthrax: Mode of Transmission for Bioterrorism  Spore is durable  Delivered as an aerosol= inhale spores  Ingestion of contaminated food  Cutaneous contact with spores or spore- contaminated material

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25 Anthrax time curve after incident

26 Inhalation Anthrax  Incubation Period  Range 1 day to 8 weeks (average 5 days) 2-60 days following pulmonary exposure 1-7 days following cutaneous exposure 1-7 days following ingestion  Period of Communicability  No person to person for inhalation

27 Anthrax Clinical Features  Pulmonary Non-specific flu-like symptoms 2-4 days after symptoms –Abrupt onset of respiratory failure  Widened mediastinum on chest x-ray High mortality almost 100% if treatment initiated after onset of respiratory symptoms

28 Anthrax Chest Xray Note the widened mediastinum

29 Anthrax Clinical Features  Cutaneous Anthrax (skin contact) Commonly seen on head, forearms and hands papular lesion that turns vesicular within 2-6 days usually non-fatal if treated with antibiotics and a 25% mortality rate if untreated  Gastro-intestinal Anthrax (ingestion) bloody diarrhea, hematemesis + blood cultures after 2-3 days usually fatal ( almost 100% mortality) after progression to toxemia and sepsis

30 Cutaneous Anthrax

31 Lymph node tissue infected with anthrax is shown in this picture.

32 Anthrax Preventive Measures  Standard Precautions  Antibiotic Therapy  Ciprofloxacin  Levofloxacin  Ofloxacin  Doxycycline  Amoxicillin for exposed children  Vaccination

33 Botulism

34  Clostridium botulism  Present in soil and marine sediment  Foodborne botulism most common disease  Inhalation botulism may also occur

35 Botulism Clinical Features  GI symptoms for food borne disease  Responsive patient with absence of fever  Symmetric cranial neuropathies  Blurred vision  Symmetric descending weakness in a proximal to distal pattern  Respiratory dysfunction

36 Botulism: Mode of Transmission  Mode of Transmission  Ingestion of toxin-contaminated food  Aerosolization of toxin  Incubation Period  Neurologic symptoms from food borne botulism begin 12-36 hours after ingestion  Neurologic symptoms of inhalation botulism begin 24-72 hours after aerosol exposure  Not transmitted person to person

37 Botulism: Exposure Management  Preventative Measures  Vaccine takes 3 injections at 0,2, and 12 weeks routine vaccination not recommended used by Department of Defense  Standard Precautions  Prophylaxis and Post exposure immunization  Trivalent botulinum antitoxin  Patients may require mechanical ventilation  Assess vent availability

38 Plague  Causative agent: Yersinia pestis, a gram-negative bacillus  usually zoonotic disease of rodents  usually transmitted by infected fleas resulting in lymphatic and blood infections –Bubonic plague –Septicemia plague  Bioterrorism exposure are expected to be airborne resulting in a pulmonary variant, pneumonic plague

39 Life cycle of plague

40 Plague Clinical Features  Pneumonic Plague  Fever, cough, chest pain  Hemoptysis  Muco-purulent or watery sputum with GNRs in gram stain  X-ray with evidence of bronchopneumonia  Bubonic Plague - skin and tissue disease form

41 Lung biopsy from pneumonic plague

42 Plague  Transmission  Normally from an infected rodent to man by infected flea  Bioterrorism-related = dispersion of an aerosol  Person to person transmission of pneumonic plague is possible via large aerosol droplets  Communicability  Via Productive cough  Droplet Precautions until 72 hours after initiation of effective antimicrobial therapy  Incubation: 2-8 days due to fleaborne disease or 1-3 days for pulmonary exposure

43 Plague Preventive Measures  Droplet Precautions  Private Room or cohort, doors closed but no special ventilation needed  Maintain isolation for 72 hours after effective antimicrobial therapy has been initiated  Vaccine not practical since requires multiple doses over several weeks and post exposure immunity has no utility  Post exposure Prophylaxis  Doxycycline  Ciprofloxacin

44 Last known person with smallpox in the world Public Health Quarantine Sign

45 Smallpox  Causative agent:Variola virus  Eradicated clinical smallpox from world  Two WHO labs store virus  Severe morbidity if released into non-immune population  single case is considered a public health emergency  Can be aerosolized or contaminated items can be used to deploy this virus as a biological warfare agent

46 Smallpox in Child

47 Progression of Smallpox Lesion

48 Smallpox Clinical Features  Acute viral illness with skin lesions quickly progressing from macules to papules to vesicles  2-4 days = prodrome of non-specific fever and myalgias  Rash most prominent on face and extremities including palms and soles in contrast to truncal distribution of varicella  Rash scabs in 1-2 weeks  Variola rash has a synchronous onset in contrast to varicella’s “crops” of lesions

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50 Smallpox  Mode of transmission: airborne, droplet and contact.  Patients are most infectious if they are coughing or have hemorrhagic form  Person to person spread  Incubation Period = 7-17 days (ave. = 12 days)  Period of Communicability = Variola becomes infectious at onset of rash and continues to be infectious until their scabs separate which is approximately 3 weeks

51 Time curve of smallpox after incident

52 Smallpox Preventive Measures  STRICT ISOLATION  Negative air pressure room, doors must remain closed, verify ventilation  Mask, gown and glove for entry into room  Limit transport  Handle all surfaces and supplies as contaminated

53 Smallpox Preventive Measures  Live virus intradermal vaccine  Vaccinia virus is used for vaccine  does not confer lifelong immunity  Must be given within 7 days post exposure to be effective

54 Durability of smallpox

55 Smallpox vaccination

56 Ricin  Causative agent: A biological toxin derived from the castor plant and castor oil.  Toxin inhibits protein synthesis  Exposure routes:  inhalation  percutaneous  ingestion

57 Ricin Clinical Features  Weakness, fever, cough and pulmonary edema occur within 18 hours after inhalation exposure  Progressing to respiratory distress and death from hypoxemia within 36-72 hours  Diagnosis: signs and symptoms found in large number of a geographically clustered group  ELISA : acute and convalescent titers in serum

58 Ricin  Treatment: supportive including treatment for pulmonary edema and gastric decontamination  Prophylaxis: None available  Prevention  Protective mask to prevent inhalation  Standard Precautions Weak hypochlorite solution (0.1% sodium hypochlorite) and/or soap and water can decontaminate skin surfaces

59 Steps in Preparing for a Bioterrorism Event  Know how to locate policy  Review Executive Summary of Plan for inclusion in Disaster Manual  Access Specific Departmental Policies  ER  Pharmacy  Use Information Sheets for Patients and Public  Learn about bioterrorism by completing module.  Get your questions answered by experts  Coordinate plan with state and local authorities


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