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Howard County's Pandemic Flu Exercise
Thursday, February 21, 2008
(Peter Beilenson, MD, MPH) --
Over the next eighteen months, Howard County
will be the site of one of the most extensive
emergency preparedness exercises in the
country. Building on the collaborative
work of the Community Emergency Response
Network (CERN) and its Continuity of Operations
Plan (COOP) committee, this three-part exercise
will test several components of the community's
response to a potential pandemic flu
outbreak. It will assess various County
agencies and providers' ability to respond to
the initial "cases" of a pandemic, including
the capacity of doctors and Howard County
General Hospital. The exercise will gauge
the County's ability to communicate guidance to
citizens (for example, recommendations to
shelter at home and avoid public gatherings)
and businesses.
The exercise will also
measure the long-term response of the community
in the face of a pandemic. By
testing continuity of operations—of county
government, medical providers and vital
businesses—we will learn what we need to do
now to be prepared as well as possible for
either a natural disaster like the pandemic flu
or a man-made emergency like a bio-terror
attack with a similarly contagious
organism.
Let me describe what might
happen in a pandemic avian flu outbreak and why
continuity of operations planning is so
important. Initial evidence of an
impending pandemic would likely come from a
growing number of flu cases occurring in other
parts of the world, with some cases hitting the
shores of the United States.
Here
in Maryland, we would gear up for our initial
response by immunizing as many citizens as
possible (if we have an effective avian flu
vaccine by then) and stocking up on anti-viral
medications (although none have been shown to
be too effective against the H5N1 avian flu
bug). Hospitals would discharge less sick
patients and non-emergent surgery would likely
be canceled as hospitals started to gear up to
take on patients severely ill from the
flu. Locally, we would encourage
residents to obtain a supply of essential
items—from non-perishable food and water to
flashlights and radio to sustain them for the
time we would ask families to shelter at
home. Public gatherings—from schools to
concerts—would be suspended in the hope of
stemming the spread of the epidemic.
Businesses of all types would close, resulting
in less intermingling of the public.
Scary, isn't it?
However, after a period
of time, probably a week or so, residents would
need to replenish their supplies and might need
a variety of services. Computers might
need fixing, phone and data lines might require
repairs, and so on. To that end, we as a
community need to develop a robust plan for
continuity of operations, at least for vital
businesses and organizations.
That is what this set of
exercises, coordinated by the Johns Hopkins
Applied Physics Lab (APL), will be
testing. The first phase of the project
is an intensive table-top, where some of the
major players in the county will be given a
pandemic flu scenario and will discuss
responses. This exercise will be
evaluated by APL staff and will help determine
what will be tested in later phases.
The exercise will culminate with a two
day, full-blown community-based scenario played
out in real time, early in the summer of
2009. County government leaders and
business owners and employees will all respond
to a simulated avian flu outbreak, without
knowing how the scenario has been
designed. Evaluation of how these
individuals and entities respond is perhaps the
single most important aspect of the
exercises. What we learn from our
responses will allow us to develop the best
possible plan for responding
successfully—both initially and in the
long-term—to a future biologic disaster,
natural or man-made.