VA TO PLAY MAJOR ROLE IF BIRD FLU EPIDEMIC STRIKES
-- DOCTORS
AND NURSES WOULD SET UP DRIVE-THRU CLINICS IN VA
PARKING
LOTS TO SCREEN FOR BIRD FLU SYMPTOMS

This is an excellent use of VA resources.
Veterans should be proud of the role the VA
will play if we have a Bird Flu epidemic.
Story here...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/15/AR2006041500901.html
Story below:
---------------
U.S. Plan For Flu Pandemic Revealed
Multi-Agency Proposal Awaits Bush's Approval
By Ceci Connolly
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, April 16, 2006; Page A01
President Bush is expected to approve soon a national pandemic influenza
response plan that identifies more than 300 specific tasks for federal
agencies, including determining which frontline workers should be the first
vaccinated and expanding Internet capacity to handle what would probably be
a flood of people working from their home computers.
The Treasury Department is poised to sign agreements with other nations to
produce currency if U.S. mints cannot operate. The Pentagon, anticipating
difficulties acquiring supplies from the Far East, is considering
stockpiling millions of latex gloves. And the Department of Veterans Affairs
has developed a drive-through medical exam to quickly assess patients who
suspect they have been infected.
The document is the first attempt to spell out in some detail how the
government would detect and respond to an outbreak, and continue functioning
through what could be an 18-month crisis, which in a worst-case scenario
could kill 1.9 million Americans. Bush was briefed on a draft of the
implementation plan on March 17. He is expected to approve the plan within
the week, but it continues to evolve, said several administration officials
who have been working on it.
Still reeling from the ineffectual response to Hurricane Katrina, the White
House is eager to show it could manage the medical, security and economic
fallout of a major outbreak. In response to questions posed to several
federal agencies, White House officials offered a briefing on the near-final
version of its 240-page plan. When it is issued, officials intend to
announce several vaccine manufacturing contracts to jump-start an industry
that has declined in the past few decades.
The background briefing and on-the-record interviews with experts in and out
of government reveal that some agencies are far along in preparing for a
deadly outbreak. Others have yet to resolve basic questions, such as who is
designated an essential employee and how the agency would cope if that
person were out of commission.
"Most of the federal government right now is as ill-prepared as any part of
society," said Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious
Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. Osterholm said
the administration has made progress but is nowhere near prepared for what
he compared to a worldwide "12- to 18-month blizzard."
Many critical decisions remain to be made. Administration scientists are
debating how much vaccine would be needed to immunize against a new strain
of avian influenza, and they are weighing data that may alter their strategy
on who should have priority for antiviral drugs such as Tamiflu and Relenza.
The new analysis, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, suggests that instead of giving medicine to first responders and
health-care workers, as currently planned, it might be wiser to give the
drugs to every person with symptoms and others in the same household, one
senior administration official said.
The approach offers "some real hope for communities to put a dent in the
amount of illness and death, if we go with that strategy," a White House
official said.
Each year, about 36,000 Americans die from seasonal influenza. A worldwide
outbreak, or pandemic, occurs when a potent new, highly contagious strain of
the virus emerges. It is a far greater threat than annual flu because
everyone is susceptible, and it would take as much as six months to develop
a vaccine. The 1918 pandemic flu, the worst of the 20th century, is
estimated to have killed more than 50 million people worldwide.
Alarm has risen because of the emergence of the most dangerous strain to
appear in decades -- the H5N1 avian flu. It has primarily struck birds, but
about 200 people worldwide have contracted the disease, and half have died.
Experts project that the next pandemic -- depending on severity and
countermeasures -- could kill 210,000 to 1.9 million Americans.
To keep the 1.8 million federal workers healthy and productive through a
pandemic, the Bush administration would tap into its secure stash of
medications, cancel large gatherings, encourage schools to close and shift
air traffic controllers to the busier hubs -- probably where flu had not yet
struck. Retired federal employees would be summoned back to work, and
National Guard troops could be dispatched to cities facing possible
"insurrection," said Jeffrey W. Runge, chief medical officer at the
Department of Homeland Security.
The administration hopes to help contain the first cases overseas by rushing
in medical teams and supplies. "If there is a small outbreak in a country,
it may behoove us to introduce travel restrictions," Runge said, "to help
stamp out that spark."
However, even an effective containment effort would merely postpone the
inevitable, said Ellen P. Embrey, deputy assistant secretary for force
health preparedness and readiness at the Pentagon. "Unfortunately, we
believe the forest fire will burn before we are able to contain it overseas,
and it will arrive on our shores in multiple locations," she said.
As Katrina illustrated, a central issue would be "who is ultimately in
charge and how the agencies will be coordinated," said former assistant
surgeon general Susan Blumenthal. The Department of Health and Human
Services would take the lead on medical aspects, but Homeland Security would
have overall authority, she noted. "How are those authorities going to come
together?"
Essentially, the president would be in charge, the White House official
replied. Bush is expected to adopt post-Katrina recommendations that a new
interagency task force coordinate the federal response and a high-level
Disaster Response Group resolve disputes among agencies or states. Neither
entity has been created.
Analysts at the Government Accountability Office found that earlier efforts
by the administration to plan for disasters were overly broad or simply sat
on a shelf.
"Our biggest concern is whether an agency has a clear idea of what it
absolutely has to do, no matter what," said Linda Koontz, director of
information management issues at the GAO. "Some had three and some had 400
essential functions. We raised questions about whether 400 were really
essential."
In several cases, agencies never trained for or rehearsed emergency plans,
she said, causing concern that when disaster strikes, "people will be
sitting there with a 500-page book in front of them."
The federal government -- as well as private businesses -- should expect as
much as 40 percent of its workforce to be out during a pandemic, said Bruce
Gellin, director of the National Vaccine Program Office at HHS. Some will be
sick or dead; others could be depressed, or caring for a loved one or
staying at home to prevent spread of the virus. "The problem is, you never
know which 40 percent will be out," he said.
The Agriculture Department, with 4 million square feet of office space in
metropolitan Washington alone, would likely stagger shifts, close cafeterias
and cancel face-to-face meetings, said Peter Thomas, the acting assistant
secretary for administration.
The department has bought masks, gloves and hand sanitizers, and has hired
extra nurses and compiled a list of retired employees who could be
temporarily rehired, he said. A 24-hour employee hotline would provide
medical advice and work updates. And as it did during Katrina, Agriculture
has contingency plans for meeting the payrolls of several federal
departments totaling 600,000 people.
Similarly, the Commerce Department has identified its eight priority
functions, including the ability to assign emergency communication
frequencies, and how those could be run with 60 percent of its normal staff.
Operating the largest health-care organization in the nation, the VA has
directed its 153 hospitals to stock up on other medications, equipment, food
and water, said chief public health officer Lawrence Deyton. "But it's a few
days' worth, not enough to last months," he added.
Anticipating that some nurses may be home caring for family members -- and
to reduce the number of patients descending on its hospitals -- the VA
intends to put nurses on its toll-free hotline to help veterans decide
whether they need professional medical care. At many VA hospitals, nurses
and doctors would stand in the parking lots armed with thermometers and
laptop computers to do drive-through exams. Modeled after its successful
drive-through vaccination program last fall, the parking-lot triage is
intended to keep the flow of patients moving rapidly, Deyton said.
Much of the federal government's plan relies on quick distribution of
medications and vaccine. The Strategic National Stockpile has 5.1 million
courses of Tamiflu on hand. The goal is to secure 21 million doses of
Tamiflu and 4 million doses of Relenza by the end of this year, and a total
of 51 million by late 2008.
In addition, the administration will pay one-quarter of the cost of
antivirals bought by states. The Pentagon, VA, USDA and Transportation
Department have their own stockpiles -- and most intend to buy more as it
becomes available.
Blumenthal, the former assistant surgeon general, questioned why two years
after Congress approved a $5.6 billion BioShield program to develop new
drugs and vaccines, so little progress has been made.
Homeland Security's Runge has a different concern: "One of the scariest
thoughts is, if this country has successfully developed a vaccine within six
months of an outbreak or our supply of antivirals is greater, there may be a
rush into the United States for those things."
And even if those fears do not materialize, officials have warned that the
federal preparations go only so far. Much is left to the states, communities
and even individuals.
"Any community that fails to prepare -- with the expectation that the
federal government can come to the rescue -- will be tragically wrong," HHS
Secretary Mike Leavitt said in a speech April 10. The administration is
posting information on the Internet at
http://www.pandemicflu.gov .
---------------
Larry Scott
(go
back to VA Watchdog dot Org Home Page)
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