U.S. Details Smallpox Attack Plan
By Laura Meckler
Associated Press Writer
Monday, September 23, 2002; 8:39 PM
WASHINGTON –– Federal officials sent states
detailed guidelines Monday for rapidly vaccinating their entire populations
against smallpox should the deadly disease return through an act of
terrorism.
It's been decades since smallpox was seen in this country and the disease
has been eradicated from Earth, so officials would assume that a single case
of smallpox means the nation is under attack. They would immediately
vaccinate those who had contact with the highly infectious patient in hopes
of stemming the spread of the disease.
Experts then would assess the scope of the attack – including the number
of patients, circumstances of exposure and details of their disease – to
determine how many others need protection, officials said Monday. It's
possible that even a single patient would trigger vaccinations across the
entire country, they said.
"Once there is a case of smallpox, what has been theoretical up 'til now
suddenly becomes real. We would anticipate many Americans would want to have
access to the vaccine," Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, said in an interview.
At the same time, a single case suggests there will probably be other
cases, increasing the risk and suggesting the need for "a fairly widespread
control program," said Dr. Walter Orenstein, director of the CDC's National
Immunization Program.
The plan sent Monday offers specific suggestions for a community that
must vaccinate 1 million people in 10 days, but officials said Monday that
the timing and the scope of vaccinations will depend on the situation.
"The decision around mass vaccination would be dependent on particulars
of the outbreak we were facing," said Dr. David Fleming, the CDC's deputy
director for science. But he added, "We've got to develop the plans right
now."
Just last month, Dr. D.A. Henderson, a top bioterrorism adviser to the
federal government, said many communities are woefully unprepared for the
task. Gerberding agreed. "In most jurisdictions, there's a ways to go," she
said Monday.
The 48 pages of guidelines are meant to help states confront a host of
logistical problems.
Although smallpox was declared eradicated in 1980, experts fear that
hostile nations or terrorist groups may have acquired the virus and could
release it on a population that now harbors very little natural immunity.
Routine immunizations in the United States ended in 1971.
The new blueprint does not address a thornier issue now under intense
discussion within the Bush administration: whom to vaccinate before an
attack even occurs. They tentatively have settled on a staged approach,
beginning with health care workers and emergency responders who face the
greatest risk of seeing a contagious smallpox patient. A decision on that
issue is expected by month's end.
Because the vaccine carries significant risks, including death, officials
are trying to balance the risk of the side effects against the risk of the
disease's return.
The blueprint released Monday gives states considerable information about
how to deliver shots to large number of people all at once. It includes:
–Ready-to-go medical screening, consent forms and information for
distribution about smallpox and the side effects of the vaccine.
–Details about how to store and prepare the vaccine for use.
–A list of places where security or crowd control will be needed,
including clinics and vaccine storage sites.
–Types and numbers of workers needed per clinic, per 8- and 16-hour
shifts. Among the required workers: volunteers to run an informational
video, nurses to give the shots and translators to assist non-English
speakers.
–Messages to deliver to people waiting for shots, including how long the
wait is. And messages for the media, including immediate public service
announcements.
–Criteria for choosing a vaccine clinic site before a smallpox attack.
–Issues to consider in transporting people to the site, including buses
and parking.
–A long list of needed routine and emergency supplies, from tape and
rubber bands to cots and blankets to fax machines and VCRs.
–Information about who should not receive the vaccine due to heightened
risk of side effects.
The mass vaccination planning is meant as a supplement to the "ring
vaccination" plans that have been circulating since last year. If a smallpox
patient were discovered, authorities would first deliver shots to those
closest to the contagious patient. They would then work away from the
central smallpox patient, vaccinating people the patient may have exposed
and then others whom those people may have exposed.
The smallpox vaccine offers protection against the disease even if
administered after someone is exposed, as long as that person gets the shot
within a few days.
© 2002 The Associated Press