1 / 18

Bioterrorism

Bioterrorism. Cherie Howk, PhD, FNP-BC Indiana State University. Terrorism VS Bioterrorism. Know the difference Ground zero vs. time delayed illness presentation Differentiated by first responders Emergency medical responders vs healthcare providers. What is Bioterrorism?.

primo
Download Presentation

Bioterrorism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bioterrorism Cherie Howk, PhD, FNP-BC Indiana State University

  2. Terrorism VS Bioterrorism • Know the difference • Ground zero vs. time delayed illness presentation • Differentiated by first responders • Emergency medical responders vs healthcare providers

  3. What is Bioterrorism? • Use of disease in a terrorist action to harm or kill an adversary's military forces, population, food, and livestock. This includes any living (or non-living) microorganism or bioactive substance that is produced by a microorganism that can be delivered by military or civilian means.

  4. History of Bioterrorism • 14th Century: Cadavers dropped into wells • 14th Century: Kaffa • 1763: Native Americans given smallpox blankets • Civil War: Animal carcasses

  5. History of Bioterrorism • 1925: Geneva Protocol • WWII: Japanese Unit 731 • 1943 US starts offensive biological program • 1969: Nixon ends BW program • 1972: Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention

  6. History of Bioterrorism • 1978: Ricin assassination in London • 1984: Contamination of salad bars in OR • 1995: Aum Shinrikyo subway attack in Tokyo • 2001: Letters containing anthrax spores

  7. Changing Goals of Terrorism • Traditional terrorists’ goals: High visibility, low casualty • Current goal of many terrorists: Mass casualties - Biological weapons are ideal From small car bombs to...

  8. Why use Biological Weapons? • Large attack area • Detection delayed • Diagnosis delayed • Ease of production

  9. Why use Biological Weapons? • Inexpensive • Knowledge easily accessed • Cold War • Equipment accessible • Safe for perpetrators

  10. Common Characteristics of Likely BT Agents • Liquid or powder • Aerosolized particles (1- 5 microns) • Line source or point source • Weather

  11. Thermal Inversions Normal Conditions:Warm air rises, disperses pollutants, cool air circulates downward Thermal Inversions:Warm air is trapped between cool air layers trapping pollutants at ground level

  12. Delivery of BT Agents • Orally • Food • Water • Aerosol

  13. CDC’s Categories for Bioterrorism Agents • Based on: • Ease of production • Availability • Ease of dissemination (stability) • Lethality • Infectivity • Category A, B, &C

  14. Category A Agents: The Threat • Bacillus anthacis (Anthrax) • Variola major (Smallpox) • Yersinia pestis (Plague) • Botulinum toxin (Botulism) • Francisella tularensis (Tularemia) • Filo and arena viruses (Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers)

  15. Epidemiological Clues • Clues from unlikely source • ER or Family Practice Clinic/Office • Intuition or “hunch” that something is not right • Will require high index of suspicion • Sometimes tips from pharmacist •  mortality,  severe morbidity, or  respiratory illnesses • Large epidemic of acutely ill patients or multiple, simultaneous epidemics

  16. Epidemiological Clues • Unusual or impossible pathogen • Prior or current threat of bioterrorism • Unexplained numbers of dead animals • Will require an astute clinician • Non-specific flu-like illness cluster(s) • High index of suspicion

  17. Recommendations • Maintain an index of suspicion • Protect thyself • Assess the patient • Decontaminate as appropriate • Establish a diagnosis • Render prompt therapy • Practice good infection control • Assist in epidemiologic investigation • Maintain proficiency

  18. Epidemiological Clues Key: Look for change or trend in your population baseline When you hear hoof beats, think of a horse, but don’t rule out a zebra

More Related