1 / 46

Hospital Smallpox Vaccination Perspective

Hospital Smallpox Vaccination Perspective. Dino P. Rumoro, D.O., F.A.C.E.P. Clinical Chairman Assistant Professor Department of Emergency Medicine. January 10, 2003. Center of Excellence: Bioterrorism Preparedness. Supported by a grant from the Chicago Department of Public Health.

velika
Download Presentation

Hospital Smallpox Vaccination Perspective

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. Hospital Smallpox Vaccination Perspective Dino P. Rumoro, D.O., F.A.C.E.P. Clinical Chairman Assistant Professor Department of Emergency Medicine January 10, 2003

  2. Center of Excellence:Bioterrorism Preparedness Supported by a grant from the Chicago Department of Public Health

  3. What You Must Be Asking Yourself: • Questions • Why?…Is this important • What?..Is the risk of an outbreak • What?..Is the risk of the vaccine • How?…Do I proceed • DO I PROCEED?

  4. History of Bioterrorism • 6th Century B.C. • Solon of Athens poisoned water with skunk cabbage during the siege of Krissa • 184 B.C. • During a naval battle against King Eumenes of Pergamon, Hannibal hurled pots of snakes • 1346 • During the siege of Kaffa, the Tartar army catapulted its plague infected dead over the city walls

  5. History of Bioterrorism • 15th Century • Pizarro gave South American natives clothing infected with smallpox • 1914-1917 • WWI: Germany allegedly tried to spread cholera in Italy and plague in St. Petersburg • 1936 • Unit 731 formed - Japanese biowarfare team responsible for thousands of deaths

  6. History of Bioterrorism • 1941-1943 • US army develops biological agent R&D unit • 1960’s • Vietcong use fecally contaminated spear traps • 1978 • Bulgarian exile, Georgi Markov, dies after assassin injects ricin pellet from an umbrella • 1979 • USSR Military Compound 19 explodes and releases an agent that kills 40-1000 (anthrax)

  7. Who is Manufacturing Bioweapons? • Iran, Iraq, Libya, Syria, North Korea, Taiwan, Israel, Egypt, Vietnam, Laos, Cuba, Bulgaria, India, South Korea, South Africa, China, Russia • (Based on a 1995 Office of Technology Assessment Report)

  8. History is against us! What Are the Chances…?

  9. Domestic Bioterrorism Attacks • 1984 • Salmonella Poisoning in Oregon • Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh of the Rajneeshee religious cult • 750 people infected, 40 hospitalized • Purpose was to influence a local election

  10. Domestic Bioterrorism Attacks • 2001 • Anthrax laden letters

  11. Ask Yourself…? • Did you really think there was ever a chance of an anthrax attack?

  12. Smallpox

  13. History of U.S. Smallpox Vaccine Recommendations • 1940’s: Last US case of smallpox • 1971: Discontinued routine vaccination of the public • 1976: Discontinued vaccination of healthcare workers • 1989: Discontinued vaccination of the military • 2003: Voluntary vaccination for first responders to a case of smallpox

  14. History and Significance • Endemic smallpox was declared eradicated in 1980 by the WHO • 2 WHO approved repositories of Variola virus • CDC in Atlanta • Institute for Viral Preparations in Moscow • Extent of clandestine stockpiles in other parts of the world remains unknown • Japan considered the use of smallpox as a bioweapon in WW II

  15. What is the Current Risk? • Logically, some degree of risk must exist!

  16. Before You Say No, Consider This... • Military Personnel • Vaccination program has begun • Reservists currently working in hospitals may be vaccinated soon • How will their patient care activities be monitored? • What if they become ill? • Who will care for a case of Vaccinia?

  17. Knowledge is Power • Know the Facts!

  18. Smallpox Vaccine • Contains live Vaccinia virus • does not contain smallpox virus • Dryvax (Wyeth) vaccine • produced using calf lymph • vaccine used in the 1960’s • FDA licensed specific lots in October 2002 • only available from CDC

  19. Bifurcated Needle

  20. Vaccine Administration • Scarification • multiple punctures with a bifurcated needle to inoculate the superficial layers of the skin with Vaccinia • virus multiplies and causes the body to produce an immune response to Vaccinia • immunity to Vaccinia is cross-protective against smallpox

  21. Clinical Response to Vaccination • 1. Papule forms (day 3-4) • 2. Vesicle forms (day 5-6) • fluid filled blister • 3. Pustule forms (day 7-9) • purulent fluid filled blister • 4. Scab forms (day 12-17) • 5. Scab falls off (day 18-28) • *The site is infectious until the scab falls off

  22. Development of Immunity • 95% of primary vaccinees develop antibodies within 1-2 weeks • protection begins to fade after 5 years • Those previously vaccinated may have residual immunity, but need to be revaccinated • does not offer full protection from smallpox • may be protective against severe disease or death

  23. Clinical Response to Vaccination • Major reaction – “take” • indicates viral replication has occurred and the vaccination was successful • considered to be protective • Equivocal reaction • anything other than a major reaction • indicates incorrect vaccination technique or impotent vaccine • requires revaccination • can be revaccinated 7 days after initial vaccination

  24. Vaccination Complications • Most benign, even if frightening in appearance • Some serious, but treatable • Few, which are rare, can be life threatening or fatal

  25. Potential Vaccine Side Effects • Symptoms usually occur about 1 week after vaccination • soreness • inflamed red ring around vaccination site • generalized weakness • swollen lymph nodes (25-50%) • fever > 100 F (2-16%) • muscle aches, headache, chills, nausea (0.3 – 37%) • fatigue • satellite lesions

  26. Accidental Implantation(inadvertent inoculation) • Transfer of Vaccinia virus to other body parts or unimmunized close contacts • Common site are mucocutaneous borders (eyes, mouth, nose, rectum) • Young children at greatest risk • Lesion progression usually follows the same course as the vaccination site • Treatment usually not necessary

  27. Supportive Therapy • Today’s medical treatments are improved from the ones available prior to 1971 • cidofovir as IND • No evidence exists, but these treatments may help to improve the outcomes of smallpox vaccine complications

  28. Pre-Event ACIP Recommendations • Phase I: Hospital and public health response teams • vaccination for hospital response teams and public health response teams • Phase II: Other first responders - fire/police/EMS • Phase III: General public? Wait for new Acambis vaccine

  29. Pre-Event Vaccination Program • Not meant to be a full scale response • Meant to be scalable if cases would occur • quick response and scale up of numbers of vaccinees • No further CDC guidelines for phase II or III plans • Plans must be flexible

  30. Smallpox Healthcare Teams • Each hospital identify a group of healthcare workers who would be vaccinated • First 7-10 days, this team would be hospital based and provide care 24 hrs/day (8-12 hour shifts) • Would enable care of the first few cases presenting to a hospital • Would be able to care for the patient immediately thus minimizing further exposures

  31. Order of Vaccination • First: Public Health Response Team • Will perform all vaccinations • Second: Hospital Site Care Team • Several member team to monitor the status of the Hospital Response Team Members and their vaccination sites • Third: Hospital Response Team

  32. Hospital Response Team:Recommended Members • Emergency staff • Intensive care staff • General medicine staff • Medical house staff • Medical sub-specialty staff • Infection control • Phlebotomy • Respiratory therapy • Security • X-ray techs • Housekeeping and laundry

  33. Hospital Response Teams • Hospital Response Team makeup: • vaccination of health care staff for purpose of caring for patients, NOT for protecting all healthcare workers • vaccinees have a responsibility to provide care if a case occurs • total hospital vaccinees expected: 50-100/hospital

  34. RPSLMC Hospital Response Team • Physicians • Emergency 6 • ID: Adult 3 • ID: Peds 1 • Critical Care: Adult 6 • Critical Care: Peds 1 • Psychiatrist 1 • Other 7 • _______________________ • Total 25

  35. RPSLMC Hospital Response Team • Nurses • Emergency 20 • Critical Care: Adult 20 • Critical Care: Peds 2 • Infection Control 3 • Other 10 • _______________________ • Total 55 • _______________________ • Grand Total 80

  36. RPSLMC Hospital Response Team • Miscellaneous • Site Care Team 5 • Respiratory 2 • Security 5 • HVAC Technician 1 • Radiology 2 • Housekeeping 4 • Mortuary 1 • _______________________ • Total 20 • _______________________ • Grand Total 100

  37. Key to a Safe Vaccination Program • Thorough screening for contraindications to eliminate individuals who are ineligible to receive the vaccine

  38. Contraindications in a Pre-Event Setting • Pregnancy or breast feeding • Immunodeficiency • HIV/AIDS • cancer • Immunosuppressive therapies • cancer treatment • organ transplant maintenance • long-term steroid therapy • prednisone: 2 mg/kg/day or 20 mg/day for 14 days or longer

  39. Contraindications in a Pre-Event Setting • Eczema / atopic dermatitis • healed or active • Vaccine component allergy • neomycin • streptomycin • polymyxin • tetracycline • Eye disease of conjunctiva or cornea • pruritic lesions • florid inflammation

  40. Contraindications in a Pre-Event Setting • Extensive skin diseases • (until the condition resolves) • acne • burns • wounds • recent incisions • impetigo • contact dermatitis

  41. Contraindications in a Pre-Event Setting • Household Contact with Contraindication • Risk of accidental inoculation of household contacts exists until the scab falls off • immunocompromised • eczema • Infants <1 year (under evaluation) • Should defer immunization in pre-event setting

  42. Logistics • Hospital Response Team phase-in • designate a small proportion (20-30%) for first round to gain experience in post-vaccination management • stagger HCW within an individual unit by ~three weeks

  43. Hospital Responsibilities • Participating hospitals will need to: • provide pre-program education • identify their hospital response team • evaluation and treatment of adverse events • pre-shift, daily management of vaccination site until scab off • assess dressings, change dressing as needed • assess site for local reactions and for vaccine take • evaluation of vaccination ‘takes’ and reporting to public health authorities

  44. Resources • www.bt.cdc.gov/training/smallpoxvaccine/reactions/default.htm • Rush specific information email: • <Dino_Rumoro@rush.edu>

More Related