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Flu
Pandemic
Federal Preparation
Efforts
HHS
Releases Pandemic Influenza Plan
December 5,
2005
Go
to HHS site
or
Download the
document here
The
New Federal Website: http://pandemicflu.gov/
The Fact
Sheet from the White House issued November 1, 2005
"Safeguarding America Against Pandemic Influenza"
National Strategy
for Pandemic Influenza
From Whitehouse.gov
November 1, 2005
Official
document (full
.pdf)
Although remarkable advances
have been made in science and medicine during the past century, we are
constantly reminded that we live in a universe of microbes - viruses,
bacteria, protozoa and fungi that are forever changing and adapting
themselves to the human host and the defenses that humans create.
Influenza viruses are notable
for their resilience and adaptability. While science has been able to
develop highly effective vaccines and treatments for many infectious
diseases that threaten public health, acquiring these tools is an ongoing
challenge with the influenza virus. Changes in the genetic makeup of
the virus require us to develop new vaccines on an annual basis and
forecast which strains are likely to predominate.
As a result, and despite
annual vaccinations, the U.S. faces a burden of influenza that results
in approximately 36,000 deaths and more than 200,000 hospitalizations
each year. In addition to this human toll, influenza is annually responsible
for a total cost of over $10 billion in the U.S.
A pandemic, or worldwide
outbreak of a new influenza virus, could dwarf this impact by overwhelming
our health and medical capabilities, potentially resulting in hundreds
of thousands of deaths, millions of hospitalizations, and hundreds of
billions of dollars in direct and indirect costs. This Strategy
will guide our preparedness and response activities to mitigate that
impact.
Pandemics happen when a novel
influenza virus emerges that infects and can be efficiently transmitted
between humans. Animals are the most likely reservoir for these emerging
viruses; avian viruses played a role in the last three influenza pandemics.
Two of these pandemic-causing viruses remain in circulation and are
responsible for the majority of influenza cases each year.
Pandemics have occurred
intermittently over centuries. The last three pandemics, in 1918, 1957
and 1968, killed approximately 40 million, 2 million and 1 million people
worldwide, respectively. Although the timing cannot be predicted, history
and science suggest that we will face one or more pandemics in this
century.
The current pandemic threat
stems from an unprecedented outbreak of avian influenza in Asia and
Europe, caused by the H5N1 strain of the Influenza A virus. To date,
the virus has infected birds in 16 countries and has resulted in the
deaths, through illness and culling, of approximately 200 million birds
across Asia. While traditional control measures have been attempted,
the virus is now endemic in Southeast Asia, present in long-range migratory
birds, and unlikely to be eradicated soon.
A notable and worrisome
feature of the H5N1 virus is its ability to infect a wide range of hosts,
including birds and humans. As of the date of this document, the virus
is known to have infected 121 people in four countries, resulting in
62 deaths over the past two years. Although the virus has not yet shown
an ability to transmit efficiently between humans, as is seen with the
annual influenza virus, there is concern that it will acquire this capability
through genetic mutation or exchange of genetic material with a human
influenza virus.
It is impossible to know
whether the currently circulating H5N1 virus will cause a human pandemic.
The widespread nature of H5N1 in birds and the likelihood of mutations
over time raise our concerns that the virus will become transmissible
between humans, with potentially catastrophic consequences. If this
does not happen with the current H5N1 strain, history suggests that
a different influenza virus will emerge and result in the next pandemic.
Preparing for a pandemic requires
the leveraging of all instruments of national power, and coordinated action
by all segments of government and society. Influenza viruses do not respect
the distinctions of race, sex, age, profession or nationality, and are
not constrained by geographic boundaries. The next pandemic is likely
to come in waves, each lasting months, and pass through communities of
all size across the nation and world. While a pandemic will not damage
power lines, banks or computer networks, it will ultimately threaten all
critical infrastructure by removing essential personnel from the workplace
for weeks or months.
This makes a pandemic a unique circumstance necessitating a strategy
that extends well beyond health and medical boundaries, to include the
sustainment of critical infrastructure, private-sector activities, the
movement of goods and services across the nation and the globe, and
economic and security considerations. The uncertainties associated with
influenza viruses require that our Strategy be versatile, to
ensure that we are prepared for any virus with pandemic potential, as
well as the annual burden of influenza that we know we will face.
The National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza guides
our preparedness and response to an influenza pandemic, with the intent
of (1) stopping, slowing or otherwise limiting the spread of a pandemic
to the United States; (2) limiting the domestic spread
of a pandemic, and mitigating disease, suffering and death; and (3)
sustaining infrastructure and mitigating impact to the economy and the
functioning of society.
The Strategy will provide a framework for future U.S. Government
planning efforts that is consistent with The National Security
Strategy and the National Strategy for Homeland Security.
It recognizes that preparing for and responding to a pandemic cannot
be viewed as a purely federal responsibility, and that the nation must
have a system of plans at all levels of government and in all sectors
outside of government that can be integrated to address the pandemic
threat. It is guided by the following principles:
- The federal government
will use all instruments of national power to address the pandemic
threat.
- States and communities
should have credible pandemic preparedness plans to respond to an
outbreak within their jurisdictions.
- The private sector should
play an integral role in preparedness before a pandemic begins, and
should be part of the national response.
- Individual citizens should
be prepared for an influenza pandemic, and be educated about individual
responsibility to limit the spread of infection if they or their family
members become ill.
- Global partnerships will
be leveraged to address the pandemic threat.
Our Strategy addresses
the full spectrum of events that link a farmyard overseas to a living
room in America. While the circumstances that connect these environments
are very different, our strategic principles remain relevant. The pillars
of our Strategy are:
- Preparedness and
Communication: Activities that should be undertaken before
a pandemic to ensure preparedness, and the communication of roles
and responsibilities to all levels of government, segments of society
and individuals.
- Surveillance and
Detection: Domestic and international systems that provide
continuous situational awareness, to ensure the earliest
warning possible to protect the population.
- Response and Containment:
Actions to limit the spread of the outbreak and to mitigate the health,
social and economic impacts of a pandemic.
This Strategy reflects
the federal governments approach to the pandemic threat. While
it provides strategic direction for the Departments and Agencies of
the U.S. Government, it does not attempt to catalogue and assign all
federal responsibilities. The implementation of this Strategy
and specific responsibilities will be described separately.
Preparedness is the underpinning
of the entire spectrum of activities, including surveillance, detection,
containment and response efforts. We will support pandemic planning
efforts, and clearly communicate expectations to individuals, communities
and governments, whether overseas or in the United States, recognizing
that all share the responsibility to limit the spread of infection in
order to protect populations beyond their borders.
Planning for
a Pandemic
To enhance preparedness,
we will:
- Develop federal implementation
plans to support this Strategy, to include all components
of the U.S. government and to address the full range of consequences
of a pandemic, including human and animal health, security, transportation,
economic, trade and infrastructure considerations.
- Work through multilateral
health organizations such as the World Health Organization (WHO),
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), World Organization for Animal
Health (OIE) and regional organizations such as the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC) forum, as well as through bilateral and multilateral
contacts to:
- Support the development
and exercising of avian and pandemic response plans;
- Expand in-country medical,
veterinary and scientific capacity to respond to an outbreak; and
- Educate populations
at home and abroad about high-risk practices that increase the likelihood
of virus transmission between species.
- Continue to work with
states and localities to:
- Establish and exercise
pandemic response plans;
- Develop medical and
veterinary surge capacity plans; and
- Integrate non-health
sectors, including the private sector and critical infrastructure
entities, in these planning efforts.
- Build upon existing domestic
mechanisms to rapidly recruit and deploy large numbers of health,
medical and veterinary providers within or across jurisdictions to
match medical requirements with capabilities.
Communicating
Expectations and Responsibilities
A critical element of pandemic
planning is ensuring that people and entities not accustomed to responding
to health crises understand the actions and priorities required to prepare
for and respond to a pandemic. Those groups include political leadership
at all levels of government, non-health components of government and
members of the private sector. Essential planning also includes the
coordination of efforts between human and animal health authorities.
In order to accomplish this, we will:
- Work to ensure clear,
effective and coordinated risk communication, domestically and internationally,
before and during a pandemic. This includes identifying credible spokespersons
at all levels of government to effectively coordinate and communicate
helpful, informative messages in a timely manner.
- Provide guidance to the
private sector and critical infrastructure entities on their role
in the pandemic response, and considerations necessary to maintain
essential services and operations despite significant and sustained
worker absenteeism.
- Provide guidance to individuals
on infection control behaviors they should adopt pre-pandemic, and
the specific actions they will need to take during a severe influenza
season or pandemic, such as self-isolation and protection of others
if they themselves contract influenza.
- Provide guidance and support
to poultry, swine and related industries on their role in responding
to an outbreak of avian influenza, including ensuring the protection
of animal workers and initiating or strengthening public education
campaigns to minimize the risks of infection from animal products.
Producing and
Stockpiling Vaccines, Antivirals and Medical Material
In combination with traditional
public health measures, vaccines and antiviral drugs form the foundation
of our infection control strategy. Vaccination is the most important
element of this strategy, but we acknowledge that a two-pronged strategy
incorporating both vaccines and antivirals is essential. To establish
production capacity and stockpiles in support of our containment and
response strategies, we will:
- Encourage nations to develop
production capacity and stockpiles to support their response needs,
to include pooling of efforts to create regional capacity.
- Encourage and subsidize
the development of state-based antiviral stockpiles to support response
activities.
- Ensure that our national
stockpile and stockpiles based in states and communities are properly
configured to respond to the diversity of medical requirements presented
by a pandemic, including personal protective equipment, antibiotics
and general supplies.
- Establish domestic production
capacity and stockpiles of countermeasures to ensure:
- Sufficient vaccine to
vaccinate front-line personnel and at-risk populations, including
military personnel;
- Sufficient vaccine to
vaccinate the entire U.S. population within six months of the emergence
of a virus with pandemic potential; and
- Antiviral treatment
for those who contract a pandemic strain of influenza.
- Facilitate appropriate
coordination of efforts across the vaccine manufacturing sector.
- Address regulatory and
other legal barriers to the expansion of our domestic vaccine production
capacity.
- Expand the public health
recommendations for domestic seasonal influenza vaccination and encourage
the same practice internationally.
- Expand the domestic supply
of avian influenza vaccine to control a domestic outbreak of avian
influenza in bird populations.
Establishing
Distribution Plans for Vaccines and Antivirals
It is essential that we
prioritize the allocation of countermeasures (vaccines and antivirals)
that are in limited supply and define effective distribution modalities
during a pandemic. We will:
- Develop credible countermeasure
distribution mechanisms for vaccine and antiviral agents prior to
and during a pandemic.
- Prioritize countermeasure
allocation before an outbreak, and update this prioritization immediately
after the outbreak begins based on the at-risk populations, available
supplies and the characteristics of the virus.
Advancing Scientific
Knowledge and Accelerating Development
Research and development
of vaccines, antivirals, adjuvants and diagnostics represents our best
defense against a pandemic. To realize our goal of next-generation countermeasures
against influenza, we must make significant and targeted investments
in promising technologies. We will:
- Ensure that there is maximal
sharing of scientific information about influenza viruses between
governments, scientific entities and the private sector.
- Work with our international
partners to ensure that we are all leveraging the most advanced technological
approaches available for vaccine production.
- Accelerate the development
of cell culture technology for influenza vaccine production and establish
a domestic production base to support vaccination demands.
- Use novel investment strategies
to advance the development of next-generation influenza diagnostics
and countermeasures, including new antivirals, vaccines, adjuvant
technologies, and countermeasures that provide protection across multiple
strains and seasons of the influenza virus.
Early warning of a pandemic
and our ability to closely track the spread of avian influenza outbreak
is critical to being able to rapidly employ resources to contain the
spread of the virus. An effective surveillance and detection system
will save lives by allowing us to activate our response plans before
the arrival of a pandemic virus to the U.S., activate additional surveillance
systems and initiate vaccine production and administration.
Ensuring Rapid
Reporting of Outbreaks
To support our need for
situational awareness, both domestically and internationally,
we will:
- Work through the International
Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza, as well as through other
political and diplomatic channels such as the United Nations and the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, to ensure transparency, scientific
cooperation and rapid reporting of avian and human influenza cases.
- Support the development
of the proper scientific and epidemiologic expertise in affected regions
to ensure early recognition of changes in the pattern of avian or
human outbreaks.
- Support the development
and sustainment of sufficient U.S. and host nation laboratory capacity
and diagnostic reagents in affected regions and domestically, to provide
rapid confirmation of cases in animals or humans.
- Advance mechanisms for
real-time clinical surveillance in domestic acute care
settings such as emergency departments, intensive care units and laboratories
to provide local, state and federal public health officials with continuous
awareness of the profile of illness in communities, and leverage all
federal medical capabilities, both domestic and international, in
support of this objective.
- Develop and deploy rapid
diagnostics with greater sensitivity and reproducibility to allow
onsite diagnosis of pandemic strains of influenza at home and abroad,
in animals and humans, to facilitate early warning, outbreak control
and targeting of antiviral therapy.
- Expand our domestic livestock
and wildlife surveillance activities to ensure early warning of the
spread of an outbreak to our shores.
Using Surveillance
to Limit Spread
Although influenza does
not respect geographic or political borders, entry to and egress from
affected areas represent opportunities to control or at the very least
slow the spread of infection. In parallel to our containment measures,
we will:
- Develop mechanisms to
rapidly share information on travelers who may be carrying or may
have been exposed to a pandemic strain of influenza, for the purposes
of contact tracing and outbreak investigation.
- Develop and exercise mechanisms
to provide active and passive surveillance during an outbreak, both
within and beyond our borders.
- Expand and enhance mechanisms
for screening and monitoring animals that may harbor viruses with
pandemic potential.
- Develop screening and
monitoring mechanisms and agreements to appropriately control travel
and shipping of potentially infected products to and from affected
regions if necessary, and to protect unaffected populations.
We recognize that a virus
with pandemic potential anywhere represents a risk to populations everywhere.
Once health authorities have signaled sustained and efficient human-to-human
spread of the virus has occurred, a cascade of response mechanisms will
be initiated, from the site of the documented transmission to locations
around the globe.
Containing Outbreaks
The most effective way to
protect the American population is to contain an outbreak beyond the
borders of the U.S. While we work to prevent a pandemic from reaching
our shores, we recognize that slowing or limiting the spread of the
outbreak is a more realistic outcome and can save many lives. In support
of our containment strategy, we will:
- Work through the International
Partnership to develop a coalition of strong partners to coordinate
actions to limit the spread of a virus with pandemic potential beyond
the location where it is first recognized in order to protect U.S.
interests abroad.
- Where appropriate, offer
and coordinate assistance from the United States and other members
of the International Partnership.
- Encourage all levels of
government, domestically and globally, to take appropriate and lawful
action to contain an outbreak within the borders of their community,
province, state or nation.
- Where appropriate, use
governmental authorities to limit non-essential movement of people,
goods and services into and out of areas where an outbreak occurs.
- Provide guidance to all
levels of government on the range of options for infection-control
and containment, including those circumstances where social distancing
measures, limitations on gatherings, or quarantine authority may be
an appropriate public health intervention.
- Emphasize the roles and
responsibilities of the individual in preventing the spread of an
outbreak, and the risk to others if infection-control practices are
not followed.
- Provide guidance for states,
localities and industry on best practices to prevent the spread of
avian influenza in commercial, domestic and wild birds, and other
animals.
Leveraging National
Medical and Public Health Surge Capacity
Rather than generating a
focal point of casualties, the medical burden of a pandemic is likely
to be distributed in communities across the nation for an extended period
of time. In order to save lives and limit suffering, we will:
- Implement state and local
public health and medical surge plans, and leverage all federal medical
facilities, personnel and response capabilities to support the national
surge requirement.
- Activate plans to distribute
medical countermeasures, including non-medical equipment and other
material, from the Strategic National Stockpile and other distribution
centers to federal, state and local authorities.
- Address barriers to the
flow of public health, medical and veterinary personnel across state
and local jurisdictions to meet local shortfalls in public health,
medical and veterinary capacity.
- Determine the spectrum
of public health, medical and veterinary surge capacity activities
that the U.S. military and other government entities may be able to
support during a pandemic, contingent upon primary mission requirements,
and develop mechanisms to activate them.
Sustaining Infrastructure,
Essential Services and the Economy
Movement of essential personnel,
goods and services, and maintenance of critical infrastructure are necessary
during an event that spans months in any given community. The private
sector and critical infrastructure entities must respond in a manner
that allows them to maintain the essential elements of their operations
for a prolonged period of time, in order to prevent severe disruption
of life in our communities. To ensure this, we will:
- Encourage the development
of coordination mechanisms across American industries to support the
above activities during a pandemic.
- Provide guidance to activate
contingency plans to ensure that personnel are protected, that the
delivery of essential goods and services is maintained, and that sectors
remain functional despite significant and sustained worker absenteeism.
- Determine the spectrum
of infrastructure-sustainment activities that the U.S. military and
other government entities may be able to support during a pandemic,
contingent upon primary mission requirements, and develop mechanisms
to activate them.
Ensuring Effective
Risk Communication
Effective risk communication
is essential to inform the public and mitigate panic. We will:
- Ensure that timely, clear,
coordinated messages are delivered to the American public from trained
spokespersons at all levels of government and assist the governments
of affected nations to do the same.
- Work with state and local
governments to develop guidelines to assure the public of the safety
of the food supply and mitigate the risk of exposure from wildlife.
Because of its unique nature,
responsibility for preparedness and response to a pandemic extends across
all levels of government and all segments of society. No single entity
alone can prevent or mitigate the impact of a pandemic.
The Federal Government
While the Federal government
plays a critical role in elements of preparedness and response to a
pandemic, the success of these measures is predicated on actions taken
at the individual level and in states and communities. Federal responsibilities
include the following:
- Advancing international
preparedness, surveillance, response and containment activities.
- Supporting the establishment
of countermeasure stockpiles and production capacity by:
- Facilitating the development
of sufficient domestic production capacity for vaccines, antivirals,
diagnostics and personal protective equipment to support domestic
needs, and encouraging the development of production capacity around
the world;
- Advancing the science
necessary to produce effective vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics;
and
- Stockpiling and coordinating
the distribution of necessary countermeasures, in concert with states
and other entities.
- Ensuring that federal
departments and agencies, including federal health care systems, have
developed and exercised preparedness and response plans that take
into account the potential impact of a pandemic on the federal workforce,
and are configured to support state, local and private sector efforts
as appropriate.
- Facilitating state and
local planning through funding and guidance.
- Providing guidance to
the private sector and public on preparedness and response planning,
in conjunction with states and communities.
Lead departments have been
identified for the medical response (Department of Health and Human
Services), veterinary response (Department of Agriculture), international
activities (Department of State) and the overall domestic incident management
and Federal coordination (Department of Homeland Security). Each department
is responsible for coordination of all efforts within its authorized
mission, and departments are responsible for developing plans to implement
this Strategy.
States and Localities
Our communities are on the
front lines of a pandemic and will face many challenges in maintaining
continuity of society in the face of widespread illness and increased
demand on most essential government services. State and local responsibilities
include the following:
- Ensuring that all reasonable
measures are taken to limit the spread of an outbreak within and beyond
the communitys borders.
- Establishing comprehensive
and credible preparedness and response plans that are exercised on
a regular basis.
- Integrating non-health
entities in the planning for a pandemic, including law enforcement,
utilities, city services and political leadership.
- Establishing state and
community-based stockpiles and distribution systems to support a comprehensive
pandemic response.
- Identifying key spokespersons
for the community, ensuring that they are educated in risk communication,
and have coordinated crisis communications plans.
- Providing public education
campaigns on pandemic influenza and public and private interventions.
The Private Sector
and Critical Infrastructure Entities
The private sector represents
an essential pillar of our society because of the essential goods and
services that it provides. Moreover, it touches the majority of our
population on a daily basis, through an employer-employee or vendor-customer
relationship. For these reasons, it is essential that the U.S. private
sector be engaged in all preparedness and response activities for a
pandemic.
Critical infrastructure
entities also must be engaged in planning for a pandemic because of
our societys dependence upon their services. Both the private
sector and critical infrastructure entities represent essential underpinnings
for the functioning of American society. Responsibilities of the U.S.
private sector and critical infrastructure entities include the following:
- Establishing an ethic
of infection control in the workplace that is reinforced during the
annual influenza season, to include, if possible, options for working
offsite while ill, systems to reduce infection transmission, and worker
education.
- Establishing contingency
systems to maintain delivery of essential goods and services during
times of significant and sustained worker absenteeism.
- Where possible, establishing
mechanisms to allow workers to provide services from home if public
health officials advise against non-essential travel outside the home.
- Establishing partnerships
with other members of the sector to provide mutual support and maintenance
of essential services during a pandemic.
Individuals and
Families
The critical role of individuals
and families in controlling a pandemic cannot be overstated. Modeling
of the transmission of influenza vividly illustrates the impact of one
individuals behavior on the spread of disease, by showing that
an infection carried by one person can be transmitted to tens or hundreds
of others. For this reason, individual action is perhaps the most important
element of pandemic preparedness and response.
Education on pandemic preparedness
for the population should begin before a pandemic, should be provided
by all levels of government and the private sector, and should occur
in the context of preventing the transmission of any infection, such
as the annual influenza or the common cold. Responsibilities of the
individual and families include:
- Taking precautions to
prevent the spread of infection to others if an individual or a family
member has symptoms of influenza.
- Being prepared to follow
public health guidance that may include limitation of attendance at
public gatherings and non-essential travel for several days or weeks.
- Keeping supplies of materials
at home, as recommended by authorities, to support essential needs
of the household for several days if necessary.
International
Partners
We rely upon our international
partnerships, with the United Nations, international organizations and
private non-profit organizations, to amplify our efforts, and will engage
them on a multilateral and bilateral basis. Our international effort
to contain and mitigate the effects of an outbreak of pandemic influenza
is a central component of our overall strategy. In many ways, the character
and quality of the U.S. response and that of our international partners
may play a determining role in the severity of a pandemic.
The International Partnership
on Avian and Pandemic Influenza stands in support of multinational organizations.
Members of the Partnership have agreed that the following 10 principles
will guide their efforts:
- International cooperation
to protect the lives and health of our people;
- Timely and sustained high-level
global political leadership to combat avian and pandemic influenza;
- Transparency in reporting
of influenza cases in humans and in animals caused by virus strains
that have pandemic potential, to increase understanding and preparedness
and especially to ensure rapid and timely response to potential outbreaks;
- Immediate sharing of epidemiological
data and samples with the World Health Organization (WHO) and the
international community to detect and characterize the nature and
evolution of any outbreaks as quickly as possible, by utilizing, where
appropriate, existing networks and mechanisms;
- Rapid reaction to address
the first signs of accelerated transmission of H5N1 and other highly
pathogenic influenza strains so that appropriate international and
national resources can be brought to bear;
- Prevent and contain an
incipient epidemic through capacity building and in-country collaboration
with international partners;
- Work in a manner complementary
to and supportive of expanded cooperation with and appropriate support
of key multilateral organizations (including the WHO, Food and Agriculture
Organization and World Organization for Animal Health);
- Timely coordination of
bilateral and multilateral resource allocations; dedication of domestic
resources (human and financial); improvements in public awareness;
and development of economic and trade contingency plans;
- Increased coordination
and harmonization of preparedness, prevention, response and containment
activities among nations, complementing domestic and regional preparedness
initiatives, and encouraging where appropriate the development of
strategic regional initiatives; and
- Actions based on the best
available science.
Through the Partnership and
other bilateral and multilateral initiatives, we will promote these
principles and support the development of an international capacity
to prepare, detect and respond to an influenza pandemic.
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