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http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20011204/hl/bioterror_3.html
Tuesday December 4 5:21 PM ET
Info, Not Quarantine, Key to Bioterror Response
By Charnicia E. Huggins
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The primary defense against the spread of
smallpox or any other germ used in a bioterrorist attack should not involve a
large-scale quarantine of potentially exposed individuals, as some emergency
management personnel have proposed, researchers assert.
Instead, isolating exposed people, restricting mass transportation and
informing the public about the nature of the outbreak and how they can minimize
their risk of illness may more effectively prevent the spread of disease,
according to a team of public health and biodefense experts.
``Credible, authoritative public information is the key to managing both the
disease effects of the outbreak and the terror effects on America,'' lead study
author Dr. Joseph A. Barbera of George Washington University in Washington, DC,
told Reuters Health.
``Implementation of quarantine, however, is not simple, will very likely be
unsuccessful, and has significant unintended consequences,'' he added.
Historical evidence suggests that quarantine can be harmful in some cases,
leading to both the spread of disease from infected to noninfected persons
sequestered together and to violence, if quarantined individuals resist the
public health sanctions placed on them, Barbera's team reports in the December
5th issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association (news
- web
sites).
A further concern is bias, the authors note, which was seen during the
quarantine instituted in 1900 after several Chinese residents of San Francisco
were diagnosed with the plague. This quarantine, which included only Chinese
households and businesses, was later judged unconstitutional because it
unfairly promoted ethnic bias.
In addition, a large-scale quarantine would necessarily involve not only a
prolonged separation of family members and possible stigmatization of the
quarantined area, but also ''potentially severe injury to the psyche of
America, since for the first time we will be secondarily victimizing the
victims of terrorism, rather than providing the usual outpouring of response
and assistance that has inspired America and the world,'' Barbera said.
Thus, before calling for quarantine, officials should determine whether or
not the action is warranted and feasible, and if its potential benefits will
outweigh any adverse consequences, Barbera and colleagues advise.
In doing so, officials should consider whether the quarantine will
effectively and significantly diminish the spread of disease, and whether there
are enough resources to enforce and maintain the quarantine, including keeping
areas of confinement safe and clean, and providing confined individuals with
adequate food and medical care.
Lastly, decision-makers should determine the potential health risks to
noninfected persons under quarantine, the consequences of noncompliance, and
the economic effects of restricting commerce and transportation to and from the
areas of confinement.
Viable alternatives to quarantine include isolation, whereby individuals
known or suspected to be infected with a contagious disease are kept apart from
others, as well as rapid vaccination or treatment programs, the report
indicates.
Other ``more practically achievable'' methods of disease containment,
depending on the specific circumstances involved, may include restricting large
gatherings, instituting short-term voluntary home curfews, promoting widespread
use of disposable masks, and closing buses, trains and other systems of mass
transportation.
``With modern, in-depth understanding of specific diseases, more specific
and medically valid response is appropriate than that used in the era of poor scientific
understanding that established the practice of quarantine,'' the researchers
conclude.
``(We) hope that our article will focus the political and public health
dialogue so that realistic, effective capabilities are in place to limit the natural
or deliberate outbreak of contagious disease,'' Barbera added.
SOURCE: The Journal of the American Medical Association 2001;286:2711-
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