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Bioterrorism Agents – Plague Lesson 6. Public Health Management. Objectives. Purposes of epidemiological investigations Case definitions Sentinel events indicating bioterrorism Public health response Natural Plague Bio-terrorist Plague Contact management and prophylaxis.
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Bioterrorism Agents – PlagueLesson 6 Public Health Management
Objectives • Purposes of epidemiological investigations • Case definitions • Sentinel events indicating bioterrorism • Public health response • Natural Plague • Bio-terrorist Plague • Contact management and prophylaxis
Principal Purposes of Epidemiologic Investigations • Characterize cases and confirm outbreak • Identify • Causative agent • Source • Mode of Transmission • Identify • Cases • Case Contacts
Principal Purposes of Epidemiologic Investigations • Person, place, time • Risk factors • Control and Prevention strategies • Monitor and evaluate response
Plague Case DefinitionsSuspect and Probable • Suspect Case • Clinically compatible • Clinical specimens – features of Y. pestis • Probable Case • Clinically compatible • Presumptive laboratory results • Positive DFA • PCR evidence of Y. pestis • Single elevated serum antibody titer to F1 antigen
Plague Case DefinitionsConfirmed • Confirmed Case • Confirmatory isolation of Y. pestis • 4-fold change in antibody titer to F1 antigen • IHC staining can be considered when isolation or serology not possible
Early Cases • Lab confirmation important • First cases in geographic area • Treatment and isolation • Post- or pre-exposure prophylaxis • Other controls • Call public health immediately
Natural Disease vs Bioterrorism • Announced, credible threat • Observed threat event • Detection • Animal cases in unusual settings • Human cases without link to endemic area
Natural Disease vs BioterrorismNatural Plague • Recent endemic exposure • Handling of sick cat, flea bites in endemic area • Recent travel to endemic area • Sporadic, infrequent cases • Bubonic most common presentation
Natural Disease vs BioterrorismBioterrorist Plague • No known endemic exposure • Point source in urban, crowded setting • Severe respiratory illness • Cluster of severe and fatal pneumonia • Plague cases that don’t respond to recommended antibiotic treatment
Control and ContainmentInitial Stages • Sampling of environment • Definition of dispersion • Confirmation of Y. pestis • Deploy SNS • Epidemiologic Investigation • Animal control • Communications
Control and ContainmentInitial Stages • Coordination of activities • Active surveillance • Assisted surveillance • Clinician Information Requests • Number of plague patients • Number of plague rule-outs • Chart review for unrecognized illness
Chart Reviews • ER discharges, admits, transfers • Non-lab confirmed fevers, pneumonias • Prioritize hospitalized patients • Follow-up on those transferred out • Critical for determining extent and source of outbreak
Symptomatic Patient Evaluation • Seek care: febrile respiratory, other plague compatible syndromes • Referral and triage hospitals • Isolation and respiratory droplet precaution • All fevers 38.5C or higher or cough presumptive pneumonic plague
Contact Management Contact – Within 6-7 feet, or 2 meters, of patient in prior 7 days • Evaluate contacts with fever or cough • 7 days prophylaxis and symptom monitoring
Contact ManagementProphylaxis Groups • Exposed to Y. pestis release • Household members of respiratory plague • HCWs with direct patient contact • First responders • Patient transporters • Co-workers, friends, others with close contact to symptomatic respiratory
Contact ManagementAntibiotics and Monitoring • Doxycycline is first choice • Alternatives: Tetracyclines, sulfonamides, chloramphenicol • IND for gentamicin, ciprofloxacin • Temperature twice daily • Unrestricted unless fever or cough develops
Contact Management • Prophylaxis refusal – monitor x 7 days • Special populations management • No vaccine with proven efficacy
Other Management Issues • Mass prophylaxis clinics • Monitor news announcements • Environmental sampling
Environmental Assessment • Goals of Assessment • Infected animals • Infectious fleas • Contaminated surfaces, soils, water supplies • Plague bacteria survive poorly externally • Short-term risk for humans
Environmental Testing • Plague in animals, new regions • Need for vector or rodent control • Control and prevention measures • Need for follow-up surveillance • Effectiveness of control measures
Review Questions – PlagueLesson 6 Public Health Management
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 1 • Mass casualty situation • Bioterrorist attack with plague • Public health wants you to interview patients for movement in past week Why are they doing this to you now?
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 1 Why are they doing this to you now? • Look like they’re doing something • Determine source of exposure • B and D • Prophylaxis recommendation development
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 1 Why are they doing this to you now? • B and D • Determine source of exposure • Prophylaxis recommendations
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 2 • You’re on hospital emergency response team • Categorizing plague cases at your hospital A confirmed case would NOT include…
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 2 A confirmed case would NOT include… • Confirmed isolation of Y. pestis • IHC staining of Y. pestis • Stained organisms of Y. pestis • Fourfold or greater increase in antibody titer to F1 antigen
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 2 A confirmed case would NOT include… C. Stained organisms of Y. pestis
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 3 • You’re a public health worker • State epidemiologists asks you to determine if plague case is natural or bioterrorist Which would best describe naturally occurring plague?
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 3 Which would best describe naturally occurring plague? • History of sporadic cases in area • 1 patient only • Patient has history of rodent exposure • All of the above
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 3 Which would best describe naturally occurring plague? • All of the above • History of sporadic cases • Only 1 case • History of rodent exposure
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 4 • Plague bioterror event • Identifying close contacts • Considering antibiotic prophylaxis Which of the following fall is not considered a close contact?
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 4 Which of the following fall is not considered a close contact? • Friends in another city • Patient transporters • Household members of respiratory • Co-workers within 6 feet
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 4 Which of the following fall is not considered a close contact? • Friends in another city
Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 5 • Plague bioterror event • Large number of casualties • You’re on local emergency response team What activity would you expect from response leaders?
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 5 What activity would you expect from response leaders? • Quarantine entire city • Drop individual investigations • Symptomatic patients stay home • Establishment of treatment centers
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 5 What activity would you expect from response leaders? D. Establishment of treatment centers
BT Agents Home 6-21. Question Plague: Lesson 6- Public Health Issues BT Agents • The best answer is B. It is important that all close contacts to a pneumonic plague case receive prophylaxis. • Correct. It is important that all close contacts to a pneumonic plague case receive prophylaxis. • The best answer is B. Even naturally-occurring cases of plague should be laboratory confirmed. It is also important that all close contacts to a pneumonic plague case receive prophylaxis. Module: Plague 6) You work at a public health department in New Mexico. Your local hospital has a positive test in their lab for a single case of suspect pneumonic plague. The patient has a documented exposure to an ill animal. How will you manage this patient? Module Introduction- Module Objectives Target Audience Continuing Education Credit Lessons-1) General Overview 2) Clinical Presentation 3) Differential Diagnosis 4) Laboratory Issues 5) Medical Management 6) Public Health Issues 7) Veterinarian Issues 8) Module Self-AssessmentAdditional Resources A. I won’t do anything. The patient is being treated. B. Look for all close contacts to the patient and begin on prophylaxis. C. Stop the referral testing at the public health lab. We know it’s plague because there was an ill animal. Plague: Lesson 6- Public Health Issues 21 of _ Back Next
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 6 • You work in public health in New Mexico • Local hospital with suspect plague • Documented exposure to ill animal How will you manage this patient?
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 6 How will you manage this patient? • Nothing. Patient is being treated. • Manage all close contacts • Stop referral testing. There was a sick animal. We know it’s plague.
Plague Review QuestionLesson 6, Question 6 How will you manage this patient? B. Manage all close contacts