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April 2003 WASHINGTON Eleven years ago the
Institute of Medicine (IOM) released a groundbreaking report
detailing strategies recommended for guarding against infectious
diseases. The report, entitled Emerging Infections: Microbial
Threats to Health in the United States, was heralded as an
important blueprint, one sorely needed to rebuild a medical
infrastructure ill-equipped to handle a serious microbial outbreak.
More than a decade later the IOM has revisited the issue, recently
releasing a follow-up report on the subject: Microbial Threats
to Health: Emergence Detection and Response.
In 1992 the CDC took the original reports recommendations to
heart and the IOMs findings were shown to be correct with
outbreaks in the United States of foodborne Escherichia coli,
a waterborne outbreak of cryptosporidiosis and an outbreak of
Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome all within a years time.
It is 2003, and events seem to be eerily similar the IOMs
current report on the state of microbial threats and our countrys
preparedness was greeted by a new emerging infectious disease
severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
Two uncanny occurrences spread a decade apart seem to
solidify a message of grave importance in the arena of infectious
diseases. There is no doubt that once again the IOM has illustrated
that as a country, as a world, as a global village, humanity is
ill-equipped to combat an outbreak of infectious disease in a manner
befitting the worlds medical skill and knowledge.
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Updated findings
The current IOM report provides a composite review of public
health knowledge and policies in response to emerging infectious
diseases. It includes human demographics and behaviors, microbial
adaptation and changes, control of vector-borne infectious diseases,
influence of the environment on microbe distribution and viability,
zoonosis, West Nile virus infection, impact of globalization and
public health safety measures.
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The Convergence Model

At the center of the model is a box representing the
convergence of factors leading to the emergence of an
infectious disease. The interior of the box is a
gradient flowing from white to black; the white outer
edges represent what is known about the factors in
emergence, and the black center represents the unknown
(similar to the theoretical construct of the black box
with its unknown constituents and means of operation).
Interlocking with the center box are the two focal
players in a microbial threat to health the human and
the microbe. The microbehost interaction is influenced
by the interlocking domains of the determinants of the
emergence of infection: genetic and biological factors,
physical environmental factors, ecological factors, and
social, political and economic factors.
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Source: IOM |
We strongly believe that an effective national response to
infectious diseases must be a global response, said Margaret
Hamburg, MD, co-chair of the Committee on Microbial Threats to
Health in the 21st Century. Therefore, our recommendations begin
with a strong call for the United States to enhance global disease
surveillance as well as the capacity to respond to infectious
disease threats, recognizing the heightened need that exists in the
developing world. Hamburg, also the vice-president for biological
programs for the Nuclear Threat Initiative, presented the opening
statement at the IOMs press conference to release the new report.
Hamburg said the U.S. public health infrastructure needed some
help after suffering years of neglect. Critical elements include
surveillance, laboratory capacity, communication skills and systems
to ensure the rapid use and sharing of information. Expanded
prevention and control methods must be implemented by an adequately
trained and competent work force.
She added that the IOM report also addressed better research
initiatives for the development of vaccines, the overuse of
antibiotics which in turn fuels resistance including FDA bans of
certain drugs, and support by the federal government for global
surveillance through cutting-edge information technology.
Patricia Quinlisk, MD, MPH, Iowa state epidemiologist, Iowa
department of public health and a member of the reporting committee,
addressed the issue of funding. Although there has been an influx of
monies at the state and local levels from the federal government
since Sept. 11 (to battle biological warfare and disease), it is
anticipated to take at least five years for the effects of said
monies to begin to take place. These funds will not only help
medical personnel prepare for man-made biological diseases that may
occur, but naturally occuring microbial threats as well.
Since the announcement of the smallpox initiative, large amounts
of efforts at the state and local level have gone into smallpox
preparation, said Quinlisk, a member of the Infectious
Disease News editorial board. I wouldn't say that has taken
away from other things, but it certainly has refocused. A lot of the
things we are doing for smallpox will help us prepare for other
things also. There is some concern that we don't forget the other
issues: influenza, for example, killed thousands of Iowans this
winter, we anticipate West Nile virus coming back next summer we
need to prepare for that. So it sometimes gets a stretch to ensure
that you are addressing everything you need to address, and that is
one of the reasons a robust public health infrastructure is so
desperately needed and so important at the state and local level.
So much of the IOM report had a resounding ring to it whenever
severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) was mentioned during the
conference. The context of this epidemiological nightmare fit
soundly inside the recommendations of the Microbial Threats
report
The current outbreak of pneumonia, SARS, that is being talked
about so much now, is a clear illustration of many of the points in
the report: the need for global surveillance; the fact that the
borders for organisms dont stop by country, explained Ruth
Berkelman, MD, department of epidemiology, Rollins School of Public
Health, Emory University and a member of the reporting committee.
In responding to SARS and the IOMs report, James Hughes, MD,
assistant surgeon general and director of the CDCs National Center
for Infectious Diseases, said, This current ongoing experience
drives home in spades the importance of the recommendations made in
this report.
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In 1992, the
IOMs findings were shown to be correct when several
outbreaks occurred. |
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According to Hughes, also a member of the Infectious
Disease News editorial board, the CDC will be moving forward
to develop an updated strategy to combat infectious disease based on
the recommendations of the report. The CDC plans to coordinate these
changes with other federal, state and local partners, including
professional societies and WHO.
This is not a time to be complacent, said Julie Gerberding, MD,
director of the CDC. We have the knowledge to greatly reduce the
threat of infectious diseases, and by taking a coordinated approach
and using the technological resources now available, we can do just
that. |