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Humanitarian Pandemic Preparedness and Response. Phnom Penh 12 October, 2009 Ron Waldman, MD. What does an influenza virus look like?. Fig.1 Electron micrograph. H emagglutinin protein Allows virus to stick to cells Determines cell and species specificity N euraminidase protein
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Humanitarian Pandemic Preparedness and Response Phnom Penh 12 October, 2009 Ron Waldman, MD
What does an influenza virus look like? Fig.1 Electron micrograph • Hemagglutinin protein • Allows virus to stick to cells • Determines cell and species specificity • Neuraminidase protein • Releases new virus particles from cells • Genetic material divided into 8 separate segments Fig.2 Schematic of influenza virus
Three Different Kinds of Influenza Pandemic Influenza “A Pandemic” Avian Influenza “Bird Flu” Seasonal Influenza “The Flu”
Why does a pandemic occur? Antigenic shift Sudden change in antigenic structure of microorganisms, especially viruses, which produces new strains of the microorganism; hosts previously exposed to other strains have little or no acquired immunity to the new strain. “Novel Influenza A (H1N1)”
What is required for a pandemic of influenza to occur? • Novel virus to which population has little or no immunity • Virus that is pathogenic and virulent in humans • Virus must be capable of sustained person-to-person transmission
A pandemic will result in larger numbers of all types of cases than in seasonal flu. • The proportions of types of cases in a pandemic will depend on the severity of the pandemic.
How does the virus spread? • Pigs? (why is it called “swine flu”) • Airplanes? (yes, but…)
Rapid transition from Phases 3 to 6, followed by quick spread around the world, may leave us little time to prepare.
New WHO Phases of Pandemic Alert • Phase 6 = Sustained community transmission of a new flu virus in 2 or more WHO regions. • “Designation of this phase will indicate that a global pandemic is under way.” • (www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/phase/en/index.html - See notes below)
First H1N1 Death in Cambodia 28 September 2009
Reason #3: Pandemics have happened before; one is happening now. They can be severe. They are always important.
Credi: US National Museum of Health and Medicine What were past flu pandemics like? 1957: “Asian Flu” 1968: “Hong Kong Flu” 1918: “Spanish Flu” 20-40 million deaths 675,000 US deaths 1-4 million deaths 70,000 US deaths 1-4 million deaths 34,000 US deaths
Reason #2: The humanitarian consequences of a pandemic could be devastating in terms of lives lost, economic disaster, and societal upheaval.
Reason #1: More than ever before, we can save lives during a pandemic!
H2P – Humanitarian Pandemic Preparedness and Response To limit excess mortality during a pandemic
New Tools for Intervention during a Pandemic • Non-pharmaceutical (community mitigation) measures • Strain-specific influenza vaccine • Antiviral drugs (Tamiflu, Relenza) • Antibiotics • Infection control measures
Community Mitigation • Isolation of those ill • Voluntary quarantine of household members • Social distancing of children (close schools?) • Social distancing of adults (stagger working hours, close places of employment, places of worship, places of amusement) – those ill should stay home
2 1 3 Delay outbreak peak Decompress peak burden on hospitals/infrastructure Pandemic Outbreak: No Intervention Diminish overall cases and health impacts Daily Cases Pandemic Outbreak: With Intervention Days Since First Case
WHO/IFRC/UNOCHA/UNICEF “Call to Action” • Identify populations at increased risk of disease and death -- health care workers and other critical personnel -- pregnant women -- children -- underlying illness -- poor access to health care
WHO/IFRC/UNOCHA/UNICEF “Call to Action” • Reduce death by treating acute respiratory illness and pneumonia -- train, supervise and ensure health care workers, including CHWs, can identify, classify and treat acute lower respiratory illnesses -- plan for a 30% buffer stock of antibiotics, O2, etc. -- educate communities about home-care, when to seek care outside the home, and when anti-virals are appropriate
WHO/IFRC/UNOCHA/UNICEF “Call to Action” • Reduce spread of disease -- prepare and disseminate risk communication messages -- map and train social mobilization networks to promote prevention -- identify target groups to receive first doses of vaccination and advocate for their access -- develop operational plans for mass vaccination
Current Knowledge Regarding H1N1 Vaccine • A single dose of non-adjuvanted vaccine induces an immunogenic response in healthy young and middle-aged adults • More people can be vaccinated with a fixed amount of vaccine • Antibody responses will develop more rapidly than with two doses • Vaccination campaigns will be easier to conduct
Current Knowledge Regarding H1N1 Vaccine • Many countries have not developed plans for use of H1N1 vaccines: -- high-priority groups -- cold chain requirements -- points of distribution and delivery -- post-vaccination surveillance
WHO/IFRC/UNOCHA/UNICEF “Call to Action” • Continue critical services and plan for the worst -- review or create business continuity plans -- prioritize continuation of critical health and other essential services as part of a whole of society approach; build on existing multi-hazard, multi-sector plans -- ensure 8-12 weeks of buffer stocks of essential medicines to continue treating priority conditions
WHO/IFRC/UNOCHA/UNICEF “Call to Action” • Plan and coordinate efforts -- incorporate pandemic activities into existing coordination mechanisms -- recognize that no one agency can provide all of the priority interventions. Build on capacities and comparative advantages of each partner -- do not allow “lack of coordination” to become a cause of death
Recommendation (2005) “An improved seismic detection system should be developed and implemented in the region as quickly as possible.”
The only thing more difficult than planning for a pandemic would be explaining why you did not do it.