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Pandemic Influenza and Preparedness

Pandemic Influenza and Preparedness. Dr Michael Hills Associate Director Critical Response Coordination Health Services Functional Area Coordinator South Eastern Sydney and Illawarra AHS. Acknowledgement.

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Pandemic Influenza and Preparedness

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  1. Pandemic Influenza and Preparedness Dr Michael Hills Associate Director Critical Response Coordination Health Services Functional Area Coordinator South Eastern Sydney and Illawarra AHS Fences or Flowers

  2. Acknowledgement • Several slides come from the UK Department of Health’s website http://www.dh.gov.uk/ - Pandemic Flu Fences or Flowers

  3. Outline • Influenza • Historical • Management • Health Planning • Business Continuity Fences or Flowers

  4. Understanding pandemic • Epidemic: serious outbreak in a single community, population or region • Pandemic: epidemic spreading around the world affecting hundreds of thousands of people, across many countries Fences or Flowers

  5. What is a flu pandemic? • Flu pandemics are global epidemics of a newly emerged strain of flu (a new influenza Asubtype) • Three pandemics in the last century • Worst killed 20 - 40 million worldwide – more lives lost than during the First World War Fences or Flowers

  6. What causes pandemic flu? • Emergence of a new flu virus • New virus passes easily from person to person • Few, if any, people have any immunity • This allows it to spread widely, easily and to cause more serious illness Fences or Flowers

  7. Who is at risk? • Everyone is at risk • Certain groups may be at greater risk of serious illness than others • Until the virus starts circulating we will not know for sure who is at most risk Fences or Flowers

  8. Is there a vaccine? • Because the virus will be new, there will be no vaccine ready to protect against pandemic flu • A specific vaccine cannot be made until the virus has been identified • Cannot be predicted in same way as ‘ordinary’ seasonal flu • ‘Ordinary’ flu vaccine or past flu jab will not provide protection Fences or Flowers

  9. What is influenza? • An acute illness resulting from infection by an influenza virus • Highly infectious • Can spread rapidly from person to person • Some strains cause more severe illness than others Fences or Flowers

  10. Symptoms • Generally of sudden onset • Fever, headache, aching muscles, severe weakness • Respiratory symptoms e.g. cough, sore throat, difficulty breathing Fences or Flowers

  11. Incubation period of influenza • Estimates vary • The range described is from 1 to 4 days • Most incubation periods are in the range of 2-3 days Fences or Flowers

  12. How influenza spreads • Easily passed from person to person through coughing and sneezing • Transmitted through • breathing in droplets containing the virus, produced when infected person talks, coughs or sneezes • touching an infected person or surface contaminated with the virus and then touching your own or someone else’s face Fences or Flowers

  13. Previous pandemics 1580 - 1900 - 28 pandemics Fences or Flowers

  14. Circulating Influenza strains and pandemics in 20th Century 1918: “Spanish Flu” 1957: “Asian Flu” 1968: “Hong Kong Flu” 20-40 million deaths 1 million deaths 1 million deaths H3N2 H2N2 H1N1 H1N1 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 Fences or Flowers

  15. Lessons from past pandemics • Occur unpredictably, not always in winter • Great variations in mortality, severity of illness and pattern of illness or age most severely affected • Rapid surge in number of cases over brief period of time, often measured in weeks • Tend to occur in waves - subsequent waves may be more or less severe Key lesson - unpredictability Fences or Flowers

  16. Framework • Australian Health Management Plan for Pandemic Influenza June 2005 May 2006 • NSW Interim Pandemic Plan – Nov 2005 • Area Interim Plan – March 2006 • Hospitals etc. • New national and state plans mid-2006 • COAG • National Action Plan for a Human Influenza Pandemic • States • Whole of Government planning Fences or Flowers

  17. Australian Health Management Plan for Pandemic Influenza • Two core strategies: • Containment • initial priority • Maintenance of Social Functioning • as it progresses • Phases • Overseas Level 3 • Australia Level 0 Fences or Flowers

  18. Challenges • Health planning • Non-health planning • Universal impact • Scarcity • Unpredictable • Unknown • Information will change • Volume Fences or Flowers

  19. Manage Workforce • Absenteeism • Vaccination • Education and training • Protection, prophylaxis • Allocation of duties • Re-allocation of staff to ‘flu response • Return to work • Child care requirements Fences or Flowers

  20. Manage Workload • Curtailing of non-priority services • Establishment of fever clinics (if designated) • Triaging at ED’s and procedures • Inpatient units (isolation, wards, ICU/HDU) • Shift services to other sites • Run new services • Management of cases Fences or Flowers

  21. Wider linkages • Emergency Accommodation • Community links • General practice (through Divisions) • Home discharge • Travellers’ management • Roles of community service staff • Support at home and in nursing homes • Public health surveillance and reporting • Communication and coordination across sectors (National, State, Area, Sector, Public, Individuals) Fences or Flowers

  22. Non-Health Sector • COAG • National Action Plan for a Human Influenza Pandemic • States and Territories • Businesses • Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources (mid-2006): www.industry.gov.au/avianflubusinesscontinuity Fences or Flowers

  23. Business Continuity Planning • “The most important thing businesses and community organisations can do to prepare for a pandemic is have a business continuity plan in place.” AHMPPI May 2006 • Different from other emergencies. • emphasis on continuity in the event of high absenteeism and interruptions to the supply of goods and services • Absenteeism could be as high as 30% to 50% Fences or Flowers

  24. Key issues • Identify essential business activities + alternative arrangements • Identify what is required for the organisation to continue operating at the minimum acceptable level • Develop mitigation strategies for business disruptions and shortages • Ensure wide awareness of contingencies • Minimising illness in workers, drawing on the guidance on infection control in this plan. Fences or Flowers

  25. Where Next? • Consider it as one of the sources of risk in organisational planning • Use the opportunity to review critical aspects of services • (Re) Learn interdependencies • Start reading • Be engaged Fences or Flowers

  26. Thank - you www.health.gov.au www.industry.gov.au/avianflubusinesscontinuity www.fluready.net http://www.dh.gov.uk Fences or Flowers

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