1 / 34

Communicable Diseases for IMT-managed Incidents

Communicable Diseases for IMT-managed Incidents. LCDR Antonio Neri MD, MPH Centers for Disease Control and Prevention January 26 th , 2010 Views are those of the presenter and do not necessarily represent official policies and procedures of CDC/ATSDR or the US DHHS. Post-disaster Situations.

tjunior
Télécharger la présentation

Communicable Diseases for IMT-managed Incidents

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. Communicable Diseases for IMT-managed Incidents LCDR Antonio Neri MD, MPH Centers for Disease Control and Prevention January 26th, 2010 Views are those of the presenter and do not necessarily represent official policies and procedures of CDC/ATSDR or the US DHHS

  2. Post-disaster Situations Katrina – via Dr. Eric Stern Haiti Source: http://images.mirror.co.uk/upl/m4/jan2010/8/0/leogane-haiti-pic-dm-ian-vogler-745564000.jpg

  3. Roadmap • Review of common diseases and their prevention • Resources • Questions

  4. Common Diseases During Incidents • Skin infections • Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) • “Rashes” • Respiratory disease • Influenza • Colds • Gastrointestinal Illness • Norovirus • “food poisoning”

  5. Warning! • The next series of slides contain pictures of rashes, not the most appealing topic. Kosovo bridge sign Source: http://www.deletetheweb.com/unstuck/tank-sign.jpg

  6. Skin Infections Poison Ivy “heat rash” Source:http://children.webmd.com/slideshow-common-childhood-skin-problems MRSA Source:http://www.dshs.state.tx.us/idcu/health/antibiotic_resistance/mrsa/picpage.asp

  7. Skin Infections – Heat Rash Cause - Occluded sweat ducts Tx – gentle cleaning, keep dry, antihistamine

  8. Skin Rashes – Poison Ivy • Tx – Dishsoap to break up oils on skin and clothes, clean dressing, ± MD visit

  9. Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) Source:http://www.dshs.state.tx.us/idcu/health/antibiotic_resistance/mrsa/picpage.asp

  10. MRSA • Locations – Existing cuts, hair follicles • Transmission – Skin-to-skin or shared items • Towels, razors, soap, weights, etc… • Tx – MD visit, use clean bandage, avoid contact with pus

  11. Skin Rash – Prevention • Heat Rash – Hygiene, mild soap • Poison Ivy – Identify area, safety briefing • MRSA • Handwashing, > 60% ETOH hand sanitizer • Individual soap / razors, wipe down surfaces • Cleaner / bleach (1 tablespoon / gallon) • Eye, nose, throat irritation if overused • Isolate infected, medical care

  12. Respiratory Diseases │---------- 12 feet? -----------│ Source: http://media.photobucket.com/image/sneeze/chuan3205/sneeze_682_473022a.jpg

  13. Influenza Virus Types A,B,C

  14. Influenza A H1N1 • Central America origin? (Usually SE Asia) • Predominant influenza strain worldwide • Transmission • Person-to-Person, mainly from coughing and sneezing • Also from contaminated surfaces and inanimate objects • NOT transmitted from: • Eating pork • Drinking water • Recreational water

  15. Current US Influenza Activity • During week 52 (December 27, 2009 – January 2, 2010), influenza activity decreased slightly in the U.S.(as of January 2, 2010) • Case rates highest in persons 5-14 years old

  16. Influenza – Treatment • Symptomatic (fluids, rest, fever control) • Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) Zanamivir (Relenza) • Symptoms for ≤ 2 days • Early Tx – Pregnancy & pre-existing diseases • Stay home for at least 24 hours after your fever is gone • If you have to go out and you are ill, consider wearing a mask to prevent spreading germs to others

  17. Influenza – Prevention Measures Cover your cough Hand washing Hand sanitizer availability in group settings ↓ resp illness Avoid touching your eyes/nose/mouth Bed spacing ≥ 3ft Head-to-Toe orientation

  18. Influenza – Prevention Measures • Vaccinations • Consider seasonal influenza vaccination • H1N1 vaccine now available everywhere • Self-isolation of ill persons for observation • Cleaning surfaces (heat, bleach, alcohols) • Infectious up to 8 hrs after contact with surface

  19. Gastrointestinal Illness • Staphylococcus aureus • Norovirus • Bacillus cereus • Clostridium • E. coli • Salmonella • Shigella • Giardia Source: http://www.voiceinthedesert.org.uk/weblog/archives/images/norovirus.gif

  20. Staphylococcus aureus – GI illness • Pre-formed toxin • Bacteria grow on UN-refrigerated food and produce toxin • Irritate upper GI tract → vomiting • Cause – Poor food handling practices • Tx – Symptomatic, ± MD

  21. Norovirus – GI Illness • In US population (1999 estimates) • Estimated 76 million total cases / year • Estimated 23 million cases of norovirus • ~ 38% of cases caused by norovirus

  22. Norovirus – Transmission • Infectious dose ≤ 100 particles • Viable on surfaces for extended periods • Rapid onset diarrhea / vomiting • Lasts ~ 24 Hrs. • Excretion in stool 12 – 72 hours (2 Wks?) Norovirus scanning Electron Micrograph (CDC Public Health Image Library)

  23. Norovirus – Transmission • Foodborne • Sick handler • Poor food handling practices • Person-to-person • Small infectious dose + long viability • Occurs in • Schools, cruise ship, refugee camps, hospitals, etc…

  24. Preventing Foodborne Illness • Make sure foods are within their appropriate handling temps for a given time • < 40 °F or > 140 °F • Certified Kitchen Manager course • http://www.dshs.state.tx.us/foodestablishments/cfm.shtm • “Design out” poor food handling processes • Sneeze guards, servers vs. self-serve

  25. Discussion – Hand Washing • Key features of a successful program • Accessible facilities • Leadership by demonstration • Personal interactions Courtesy CAPT George Vaughan, CDC, Vessel Sanitation Program

  26. Discussion – Hand Sanitizer • Varying alcohol concentrations • Contradictory research findings • CDC advocates sanitizer as an adjunct Courtesy CAPT George Vaughan, CDC, Vessel Sanitation Program

  27. Roadmap • Review of common diseases and their prevention • Resources • Questions

  28. Resources for IMTs - NPS • InsideNPS; click swine flu (H1N1) under Hot Topics on right-hand side http://inside.nps.gov/waso/waso.cfm?lv=2&prg=122 • External website http://www.nps.gov/public_health/di/flu.htm

  29. Resources for IMTs - NPS • ARC guidelines for shelters http://www.region4a-mrc.org/documents/2009march/AMERICAN%20RED%20CROSS%20GUIDE%20FOR%20SHELTER%20MANAGERS.htm • CDC Shelter assessment survey http://www.bt.cdc.gov/shelterassessment/ • SPHERE guidance for minimum standards of water / sanitation http://www.sphereproject.org/ • US Army recommendations for preventing acute infectious disease for close-quarter living http://usachppm.apgea.army.mil/documents/TG/TG314.pdf

  30. Questions? LCDR Antonio Neri MD, MPH US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Work: 770-488-3378 Email: aneri@cdc.gov CDC EOC 800-232-4636 770-488-7100 eocreport@cdc.gov

More Related