New Guide Helps Communities Prepare for Vaccine and Drug Dispensing in the Event of Bioterrorism or Other Public Health Emergency
Authored by NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell's
Department of Public Health
Available Through AHRQ to State, County, and Local
Officials Nationwide
New York, NY (September 29, 2004) — Physician-scientists
in the Department of Public Health at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell
Medical Center have created the first nationwide planning guide for community-based
response to bioterrorism and other infectious disease outbreaks since the 2001
anthrax attacks. The document and accompanying computer planning model will
help communities ensure that all Americans have needed drugs and vaccines in
the event of a natural epidemic or bioterrorist attack.
The effort, funded by the Department of Health and Human Services' Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), is written to explain the formation
of community-wide mass prophylaxis plans to a wide range of audiences, including
public health and emergency management planners, community organizations, and
the media.
"States and localities are charged with the enormous task of readying medicines
needed in an emergency," says Department of Health and Human Services Secretary
Tommy G. Thompson. "This guide goes a long way toward helping them put the
necessary resources into place and to meeting the Federal government's call for
readiness."
"We wanted this planning guide to be both a practical roadmap and a 'tool
kit' for everyone implementing these important steps," says Dr. Nathaniel
Hupert, the guide's lead author, assistant professor of public health and medicine
at Weill Cornell Medical College, and assistant attending physician at NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center.
The new guide complements the Strategic National Stockpile guidebook prepared
by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which includes a chapter
on dispensing medications and vaccines.
The new guide:
- provides a framework for understanding the components of epidemic outbreak
response (surveillance, stockpiling, distribution, dispensing, and follow-up
care), and the planning and conduct of dispensing operations, using specially
designated dispensing clinics;
- applies these concepts to develop model pill-dispensing and vaccination
clinics run on the Bioterrorism and Epidemic Outbreak Model (BERM), a computer
staffing model also developed by Dr. Hupert and his colleagues at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill
Cornell that can be customized to meet local community needs, and is available
for download as an MS Excel spreadsheet at http://www.ahrq.gov/research/biomodel.htm;
and
- discusses implementation of a command-and-control framework for dispensing
clinics, based on the CDC's National Incident Management System.
Entitled "Community-Based Mass Prophylaxis: A Planning Guide for Public
Health Preparedness," the guide can be found at
http://www.ahrq.gov/research/cbmprophyl/cbmpro.htm.
Printed copies are available by contacting AHRQ's Publications Clearinghouse
at 1-800-358-9295, or by sending an e-mail to
ahrqpubs@ahrq.gov.
NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell's Public Health
Contribution
Since 2000 (well before the September 11 attacks), NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill
Cornell Medical Center's Department of Public Health has pioneered approaches
to bioterrorism preparedness — including the development of computer
models for determining optimal antibiotic and vaccine dispensing; research
on hospital capacity to treat mass casualties for a bioterrorist event; and
extensive educational activities for medical students, residents, and practicing
physicians. With more than one million dollars in Federal research funding
for these efforts, faculty from Weill Cornell have been working with the Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) of the Department of Health and Human Services to research
solutions for and educate emergency management and public health officers around
the country about the design and operation of antibiotic and vaccine prophylaxis
centers.
In related work, Dr. Hupert and NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell's Department
of Public Health published the first evidence-based outpatient triage protocol
for inhalational anthrax by identifying key symptoms that distinguish inhaled
anthrax from the flu and other common respiratory conditions. These findings
are being used to develop effective response strategies that preserve vital
hospital surge capacity in the event of future bioterrorist attacks.
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