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Pandemic Influenza Planning and Exercising The Miami-Dade County Experience. Meeting with GAO Representatives July 23, 2007. MDCHD Profile. Eighth Largest County in the US Population - 2.5 million MDCHD Budget - $63 Million MDCHD Employees - 900
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Pandemic InfluenzaPlanning and Exercising The Miami-Dade County Experience Meeting with GAO Representatives July 23, 2007
MDCHD Profile • Eighth Largest County in the US • Population - 2.5 million • MDCHD Budget - $63 Million • MDCHD Employees - 900 • Number of Services Provided Annually – estimated 1,928,000 Source: Catch Study 2004/ ESRI Business Information Solutions Source: HCMS 10/1/04 – 9/30/05
Pandemic flu Preparedness and ResponseMDCHD* Roles • Coordinate preparedness actions with community partners • Monitor worldwide progress of new influenza strains • Establish a robust surveillance system • Inform and Educate the public • Convene the County pandemic planning workgroup • Draft the Miami-Dade Pandemic Flu Plan * Miami-Dade County Health Department
How did we Plan for a Pandemic? • The M-D County Influenza Workgroup drafted our Pandemic Preparedness and Response Plan • The Miami-Dade pandemic flu plan took elements from • Florida Department of Health (DOH) • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) • World Health Organization (WHO) • The plan was included in the County Emergency Management Plan (CEMP)
What Challenges do we Face? • Not enough funding and resources • Staffing • Logistics • Mechanical Ventilators • PPEs • Hospital beds • Alternate Medical Facilities • Ethical concerns • allocation and prioritization of resources • Public and healthcare providers “burned out”
Are There Solutions in Miami-Dade? • Build a Medical Reserve Corps with at least 12,000 members • Deliver systematic messages to keep awareness among local government officials and the public • Identify potential alternate medical facilities • Local governments’ commitment is needed • Identify funding sources to help us purchase PPEs, ventilators, and other tools • Keep working in the development of proper ethical guidance for M-D healthcare providers
Pandemic Flu Exercisesin Miami-Dade • Three CRI field exercises conducted between 2005 and 2006 included a simulation of massive vaccination for influenza • A pandemic influenza tabletop exercise was conducted in March 2007 CRI: Citi Readiness Initiative
Pandemic Flu Exercisesin Miami-Dade • After-action reports of the pandemic influenza field and tabletop exercises were created • MDCHD Office of Public Health Preparedness implemented the results from the after-action report into its annual CRI update
Challenges Faced Regarding Exercising for a Pandemic • Requesting and receiving approval to purchase refreshments for participants • Getting local hospitals to participate on a pandemic exercise • Gathering enough people from the community to deliver a real mass vaccination *Points taken from the pandemic influenza tabletop after-action report.
Possible Solutions to These Challenges • Purchase of refreshments by CHDs is regulated by the State’s Comptroller’s Office • Perhaps a line item from the CDC in the federal funds send to the State assigning funds specifically for exercise refreshments • Use the Hospital Preparedness Consortium as a platform to enhance hospitals participation in exercises • Work with members of the MRCs and the community at large to increase community participation in exercises (flu season)
How do we Coordinate on Planning and Exercising with other Agencies? • It is accomplished through • the Miami-Dade County Pandemic Influenza Workgroup • Representatives of local, state and federal government agencies, and community partners • Active communication with • the Miami-Dade Public Schools System • the Miami-Dade Office of Emergency Management • Local Law Enforcement agencies • CDC MIA Quarantine Office (CDCQS) and MIA administration • DOH Headquarters and CDC CRI program (See Planning Folder, Annex 1)
Coordination with MIA and the CDC Quarantine Station • Multiple meetings with MIA authorities and the CDCQS to coordinate a pandemic response • Exploring options for a location outside of MIA (initial 72 hours of quarantine) • Exercise to test M-D local response to a biological threat at MIA (2003) • MDCHD staff attended a two-day training organized by the CDCQS and FLDOH addressing pandemic flu and other threats (2006) • MOU between these entities is being discussed
Local Mechanism that facilitate Preparedness in M-D • Miami-Dade County Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Workgroup • MDCHD Influenza Work Group • Miami-Dade Hospital Preparedness Consortium • Miami-Dade County OEM • CRI implementation
MDCHD Influenza Workgroup • Review Florida DOH Pandemic Influenza plan • Daily and Weekly influenza reports • Recruiting for the Influenza Sentinel Provider Surveillance System • Providing influenza education to the community
Coordination with Private and Non-Profit Sectors • Coordination done through • the Miami Dade Hospital Preparedness Consortium • the Health Council of South Florida • the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce • The Dade County Medical Association • The Miami Chapter of Infection Control Practitioners • Others • M-D Pandemic Plan shared an available online
MDCHD Responsibilities with the Implementation Plan • Ensuring all reasonable measures are taken to limit the spread of an outbreak • Establishing comprehensive and credible preparedness and response plans • Integrating non-health entities in the planning for a pandemic • Law enforcement, utilities, city services and political leadership • Establishing state and community-based stockpiles and distribution systems • Identifying key spokespersons for the community • Providing public education campaigns
Summary of Critical Challenges • Not enough funding and resources • Staffing • Logistics • Mechanical Ventilators • PPEs • Hospital beds • Alternate Medical Facilities • Ethical concerns • allocation and prioritization of resources • Purchase of refreshments for exercise participants • Public and healthcare providers “burned out”