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Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

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Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’ Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response Capabilities for Terrorism Involving Weapons of Mass Destruction 30 April 2003 Gregory B. Saathoff M.D. Critical Incident Analysis Group. Terrorism has a Basis in Psychology. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Bioterrorism Responses Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding & Shielding What is to be done’ What is to be done’ Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response Capabilities for Terrorism Involving Weapons Capabilities for Terrorism Involving Weapons of Mass Destruction of Mass Destruction 30 April 2003 Gregory B. Saathoff M.D. Gregory B. Saathoff M.D. Critical Incident Analysis Group Critical Incident Analysis Group
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Page 1: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Bioterrorism ResponsesBioterrorism Responses& Shielding& Shielding

‘‘What is to be done’What is to be done’

Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response Capabilities for Terrorism Involving Weapons Capabilities for Terrorism Involving Weapons

of Mass Destructionof Mass Destruction

30 April 2003

Gregory B. Saathoff M.D.Gregory B. Saathoff M.D.Critical Incident Analysis GroupCritical Incident Analysis Group

Page 2: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Terrorism has a Basis in Terrorism has a Basis in PsychologyPsychology

“Panic in and of itself, is becoming the new terrorist

tool”

The function of terrorism…

…is to terrorize“…America’s adversaries must find ways to exploit

perceived US weaknesses, social,

political and military.”

Page 3: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Biological Agents – Biological Agents –

The ultimate (threat) weapons?The ultimate (threat) weapons?

• Psychologically potent

• Small quantities constitute a large threat

• Persistence

• Production uses dual-use technology

• Readily-manufactured

• Tracking & verification difficult

• Defensive postures weak or non-existent

Page 4: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Bioterror eventsBioterror events

First responders & incident managers will be ‘local’Any strategy for a bioincident must begin with ‘local’ planning

The strategy must recognize the disconnect, temporal & functional, between ‘local’ and ‘federal’ responses

“Think Federal – But Act Local”

Page 5: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Disaster Response: Bioterror EventDisaster Response: Bioterror Event

1/3 will be ‘numb’ and will respond to leadership

1/3 will be ‘heroic’ but will require direction

1/3 will ‘panic’ and require significant resources

In a contagious bioterror In a contagious bioterror event, event, behaviorbehavior of potential of potential victims will determine the victims will determine the success or failure of the success or failure of the

attack. A successful attack attack. A successful attack does not require panic, but does not require panic, but

does require mobility leading does require mobility leading to spread of epidemicto spread of epidemic

Crisis Management Goal: Crisis Management Goal: Contain ContagionContain Contagion

Page 6: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Evacuation despite Government Directive to Shelter-in-Place

• Explosion in at BPS chemical plant in West Helena, Arkansas, (1997) kills three firefighters, injures many others and releases toxic smoke;

• 90% followed instructions to evacuate

• only 27% followed instructions to shelter in place “At least 68% of those people advised to shelter chose to evacuate instead.” John Sorenson ORNL

Page 7: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Day 1: bacterial meningitis dx in student Day 3 >1,000 students vaccinatedDay 8: five more people were diagnosed,

3,300 more vaccinated death of student 5 new cases spread of epidemic and “panic”

Day 12: 26,000 more vaccinated

Michael Osterholm, Ph.D., M.P.H., Former MN State Epidemiologist

Meningitis Outbreak: Mankato MN, 1995

Page 8: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

“Quarantine is defined as the restriction of activities or limitation of freedom of movement of those presumed exposed to a communicable disease in such a manner as to prevent effective contact with those not so exposed.” CDC 2002

Quarantine – The Unwanted Quarantine – The Unwanted SolutionSolution

Decision by local or state health official

Quarantine imposed

Quarantine enforced

Page 9: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

• Imposed measure invoking negative responses

• Behavior of affected population will impact outcome

• Perceived as infringing civil liberties and freedoms

• Public perception of incident management is important

• Absent effective States law - federal intervention

• Public will focus on federal involvement and management

• Ad hoc approaches will invoke fear, panic, & anger

Problems with “Quarantine”Problems with “Quarantine”

Page 10: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Evacuation is defined as the organized, phased, and supervised dispersal of people from dangerous or potentially dangerous areas (FEMA definition). See also mandatory evacuation; spontaneous evacuation; voluntary evacuation.

Evacuation

Page 11: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Spontaneous Evacuation

Residents. . .observe an emergency event or receive unofficial word of an actual or perceived threat and without receiving instructions to do so, elect to evacuate the area.

Their movement, means, and direction of travel is unorganized

and unsupervised.

Page 12: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

The Evacuation Escalator

Page 13: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Community Shielding and Autonomy

Page 14: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Community Shielding – DefinedCommunity Shielding – Defined

To be successful, shielding requires a partnership of government, business, media, and the public, operating under the best scientific and medical practices to break the disease cycle and insure

minimal disruption to the routine activities of the nation

A form of insulation wherein individuals and groups employ a self-imposed isolation, or

quarantine, within their natural surrounding for a temporary period of time.

Shielding, with federal leadership & support presents a positive image by enlisting the public. This maintains trust in leadership and

helps insure effective incident management

Page 15: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

CIAG Foundations of Community CIAG Foundations of Community

ShieldingShielding

Critical Incident Analysis Group (CIAG): An interdisciplinary consortium dedicated to

improving crisis response to critical incidents

Page 16: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Quarantine vs. Community ShieldingQuarantine vs. Community Shielding

Quarantine

• Enforced/Coercive

• Reactive

• Opaque

• ‘Top-down’

• Involuntary

• Communication ‘poor’

• Government imposed

Community Shielding

• Facilitated

• Proactive

• Transparent

• ‘Bottom-up’

• Voluntary

• Communication ‘rich’

• Government sanctioned

Page 17: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Spontaneous Evacuation vs. Community Shielding

• Reactive• Increased movement• Exacerbates crisis• Unfamiliar environment

• Unpredictable needs• Unstable communication

• Govt. trust not established• Decreased options: “chute”

• increased $

• Investigation capabilities impaired

• Urban bottleneck

• Proactive• Decreased movement• Stabilizes Crisis• Familiar environment

• Predictable needs• Stable communication

• Govt. trust established• Preserved options

• Decreased $

• Investigative capabilities preserved

• No urban bottleneck

Page 18: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Community Shielding: A Concept for the 21Community Shielding: A Concept for the 21stst CenturyCentury

a proactive, voluntary concept

is a home/community based action

provides a ‘safe, secure, comfort zone’

uses existing resources/information technology

The period of required shielding is 7-28 days

Page 19: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Community Shielding Matrix - Community Shielding Matrix - ImplementationImplementation

StatusPre-Incident

HSASLow

GuardedElevated

HighSevere

IncidentStand-Fast

All-ClearNon-contagious

Contagious

Government NGO’s Media Family Community Business

Page 20: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

Proposed Work on Proposed Work on ImplementationImplementation

Create specific ‘templates’ for community shielding

Develop private sector methodologies

Consistent with Federal, regional, state & local planning

Interaction with ‘key stakeholders’

Direct research into specific issues

Who? When? How?

Agent specific actions

Page 21: Bioterrorism Responses & Shielding ‘What is to be done’

“I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but

the people themselves; and if we think them not

enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion,

the remedy is not to take it from them but to inform

their discretion.”


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