Title: Behavioral Health Consequences To An Infectious Disease Outbreak
1Behavioral Health Consequences To An Infectious
Disease Outbreak
Stephen Formanski, Psy. D. Merritt Chip
Schreiber, Ph. D.
2Hospitals Full-Up
- Hospitals Full-Up the 1918 Influenza Pandemic
- This video shows the implications of Pandemic
Influenza for Bioterrorism Response.
www.hopkins-biodefense.org
3The Public Health Goal A Balanced Approach
- Inspire Preparedness Without Panic
4Outline of Presentation
FINISH
Responder Issues
START
Administrative Issues
Medical Clinical Issues
5Familiar Communicable Diseases are No Less
Threatening
- Consider these World Health Organization
statistics - One-third of the world's population is infected
with tuberculosis, and 2 million die from the
disease each year. As many as 79 of new TB
infections are "superstrains," resistant to the
most common therapies. - Some 42 million people are HIV positive, and 3.1
million die from AIDS each year. - Between 3 million and 5 million new cases of
influenza are reported each year, contributing to
250,000 deaths worldwide. - 170 million people are chronically infected with
the hepatitis C virus, and 3-4 million are newly
infected each year.
6Headline Grabbers
- Human Immunodeficiency Virus Acquired
Immunodeficiency Disorder (HIV/AIDS) - Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
- West Nile Virus
- Avian Flu
- Virual Hemorrhagic Fevers (VHF)
- Argentine hemorrhagic fever
- Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF)
- Ebola hemorrhagic fever
- Kyasanur Forest disease
- Hendra virus disease
- Bolivian hemorrhagic fever
- Sabia-associated hemorrhagic fever
- Venezuelan hemorrhagic fever
- Lassa fever
- Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS)
- Marburg hemorrhagic fever
- Omsk hemorrhagic fever
- Nipah virus encephalitis
- Lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCM)
7How Bad Was SARS
- 2003 SARS outbreak appeared to originate in China
- Ontario 375 contacted SARS and 44 died
- Demonstrated that earlier warning signs were
ignored. - Demonstrated that identified faults were not
corrected. - Roughly 30 of quarantined individuals suffered
sxs of PTSD and depression. Duration of
quarantine was significantly related to increase
in PTSD sxs.
8SARSQuarantine Lessons Learned
- Civic Duty and not legal consequences was the
primary motivation for compliance. - Public Cooperation depends on public confidence
that public health decisions are made on an
independent medical basis - Public Cooperation depends upon public
understanding of what is necessary and the
authorities are keeping everyone informed of what
is happening
9SARS Quarantine Obstacles
- Fear of loss of income
- Poor logistical support
- Psychological Stress
- Spotty monitoring of compliance
- Inconsistencies in the application of quarantine
measures - Problems with public communication
10Recommendation for Quarantine
11National Pandemic Influenza Planning Landscape
National Strategy and Implementation Plan
Departmental Plans
Component Plans
Synchronization
Federal Region Plans
State, Local, and Urban Area Plans
Private Sector Plans
12Pandemic Planning Assumptions
- DHHS and the White House Homeland Security
Council (HSC) utilizing historical data from this
centurys pandemics estimated about 20-30 of the
population would be ill. Worst case scenario
40. - Spread of the Pan flu would be comparable to past
pandemics and the length of the outbreak would be
about 6-8 weeks in a given community. - Even if 30 of a community gets sick, the illness
would be spread over an 6-8 week period. The
average duration of the illness is 10 days. - Even in peak times it is likely that no more than
10 of the community would be ill at any one
time. (caring for sick family members will raise
the absentee rate)
13Planning Assumptions Health Care
- 50 of ill persons will seek medical care
- Hospitalization and deaths will depend on the
virulence of the virus
14ESF 8 Planning Assumptions at a Glance
- Planning for a 1918like pandemic
- Incident of National Significance determined at
US Stage 2 - Federal public health and medical assistance
provided to States, Tribes and Territories will
be coordinated by HHS/ASPR - Public health and medical support to Foreign
nations and international organizations will be
coordinated by HHS/ASPR/OGHA and DOS
15(No Transcript)
16Influenza Antiviral Drugs and Medical Supplies
- Strategy
- Procure 81 million courses of antivirals
- 6 million courses to be used to contain an
initial U.S. outbreak - 75 million courses to treat 25 percent of U.S.
population - Accelerate development of promising new antiviral
drugs
17Disease Mitigation Measures
- Hand washing and respiratory etiquette
- Social distancing including the prohibition of
social gatherings - Travel restrictions
- Use of masks
- Use of antiviral medications
- Use of Isolation (confinement of symptomatic
patients so they wont infect others) - Use of voluntary or involuntary quarantine (the
separation of asymptomic people who may have been
exposed to infection and may or may not become
ill) - School closures
18Disease Mitigation Measures Feasibility
- Hand washing and respiratory etiquette
- The influenza virus survives on your hand for 5
minutes or less. This mitigating measure is
advisable. - Social Distancing
- The recommendation is a distance of 3 feet or
more. Efficacy of this - course is unknown and in many situations not
likely (bus, rail, air travel, - grocery shopping) NYC subway averages 4.7
million riders each day. - Los Angeles Metro area averages 1.3 million
riders per day. - Travel Restrictions
- The World Health Organization Writing Group
stated - screening and quarantining entering travelers
at - international borders did not substantially
delay virus - introduction in past pandemics. . . and will
likely be even - less effective in the modern era.
- WHO group on SARS concluded that entry
screening of travelers through health
declarations or thermal scanning at
international borders had little documented
effect of detecting SARS cases.
19Disease Mitigation Measures Feasibility
- Use of masks
- PPE is essential to curtail the transmission of
influenza in hospitals. - Patients would be advised to wear surgical masks
to decrease respiratory particles being sent into
the air. - In Asia during the SARS epidemic many people wore
surgical masks in public. Studies have shown the
ordinary surgical masks do little to prevent
inhaling small droplets which may contain
influenza. The masks can only be worn for a
short time before the pores of the mask clog with
moisture from breathing and the airflow goes
around the mask.
20Disease Mitigation Measures Feasibility
- Use of Antiviral Medications
- The effectiveness and optimal use of antivirals
is uncertain due to several factors - Virus mutation, thus increasing the possibility
that resistance can develop - The available quantities of antiviral for
prophylaxis - Logisitical challenges with providing timely tx.
- The amount of antivirals used to prevent
infection in 1 healthcare worker is the
equivalent of treating 5-7 ill patients
(prophylaxis w/75mg, BID for 8-10 weeks vs. tx
with 150mg, BID for five days)
21Disease Mitigation Measures Feasibility
- Antivirals (the good news)
- GlaxoSmithKline believes it has developed a
vaccine for the H5N1 deadly strain of bird flu
that may b e capable of being mass produced by
2007. - -The vaccine has proved effective at two doses
of 3.8micrograms during clinical trials in
Belgium. - Sanofi-Aventis drug company is also working on a
vaccine.
22Disease Mitigation Measures Feasibility
- Use of Isolation
- With expected shortages of medical beds, home
isolation of non-critically ill influenza
patients is a viable option - There are several logistical issues that may
hamper people from being able to remain isolated
in their home such as the provision of basic
medical care and obtaining food and supplies. - It may not be easy to persuade those without
paid sick leave (some 59 million persons) to
absent themselves from work, unless employers
address this problem directly - Inglesby et. al.
23Disease Mitigation Measures Feasibility
- Use of Quarantine
- The aim of voluntary home quarantine is to keep
possibly contagious, but asymptomatic people out
of contact with others. This raises both
practical and ethical issues - Community implementation raises issue of levels
of care and support required - Compliance issues Will parents be willing to
stay home - ? What about college issues dorming
- ? What about the homeless population (750,000)
- What about the economic concerns of individuals,
families and the community. - Ethical issues
- Healthy individuals staying with
infected individuals. Quarantine would prevent
healthy children from being sent to stay with
other family - members.
24Disease Mitigation Measures Feasibility
- Large-Scale Quarantine
- The World Health Organization (WHO) Writing
Group, after reviewing the literature and
considering contemporary international
experience, concluded that forced isolation and
quarantine are ineffective and impractical.
Inglesby, Nusso, OToole and Henderson - It is recommended that Large scale quarantine be
eliminated from consideration.
25- 1918 Flu Epidemic Teaching Valuable
LessonsActions Taken Apparently Were Effective - By David Brown
- Washington Post Staff Writer
- Wednesday, December 13, 2006 A04
- New analysis of how American cities responded to
the killer Spanish flu of 1918 suggests that
closing schools, banning large gatherings,
staggering work hours and quarantining households
of the ill may have saved tens of thousands of
lives. Which of the many non-pharmaceutical
interventions was especially effective in
reducing mortality is unknown, but all would
theoretically be available should pandemic
influenza again sweep the country. The new
findings run counter to previous research that
concluded that the public health measures
instituted in 1918 may have delayed or dampened
the epidemic in many cities but probably had
little effect on the ultimate death toll. The
new data were presented this week to Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention experts, who are
helping to draw up guidelines for what local
health departments might do during the early
stage of an influenza pandemic, when a vaccine
would be unavailable and there would be too few
antiviral drugs to go around. - "There is reason for optimism. Even almost 100
years ago, with some very simple tools, there may
have been an effect of these measures," said
Martin Cetron, a physician who directs global
migration and quarantine at the CDC. In 1918,
the public health responses included isolating
the ill, quarantining houses, closing schools,
canceling worship services, restricting the size
of funerals and weddings, closing saloons and
theaters, restricting door-to-door sales,
discouraging the use of public transportation,
staggering the hours of business and factory
operations, imposing curfews and, in some places,
recommending the use of face masks in public.
Howard Markel, a physician and historian at the
University of Michigan Medical School, is leading
a project to analyze the experience of 45
American cities, looking for relationships among
flu cases, mortality and public health measures. - The researchers used a model to determine what
the epidemic would have looked like had no
measures been taken and compared that result with
a city's actual experience. - St. Louis closed its schools at a time when flu
was causing 21 more deaths per 100,000 people per
week than what had been seen in previous years.
That step -- the earliest taken by any of 33
cities analyzed so far -- appears to have reduced
St. Louis's flu mortality by 70 percent. - Cincinnati responded less quickly, invoking
public health measures when excess deaths from
flu were 46 per 100,000. It reduced its potential
flu mortality by 45 percent. - Philadelphia was extremely late, not acting until
its excess death rate was 250 per 100,000. That
reduced mortality by 28 percent, Markel and his
colleagues found. - How U.S. communities would react to a sudden
closure of schools is uncertain, although the
experience this past fall of one rural
Appalachian county suggests that there may be
little opposition over the short term. Yancey
County, in rural and mountainous western North
Carolina, closed its 2,559-student school system
from Nov. 2 to 13 because of an outbreak of
influenza B. A random survey of households found
that 91 percent supported the school board's
decision. In half of those households, all the
adults worked outside the home. During that
period, one-quarter of them had to take time off
from work, mainly because they were ill
themselves or had to care for a sick family
member, and not simply to stay with children not
in school, said April J. Johnson of the CDC's
Epidemic Intelligence Service, who investigated
the outbreak. In only two of 220 households did
adults have to pay for extra child care when
schools were closed. In most cases, relatives and
friends stepped in to help, Johnson found.
26Disease Mitigation Measures Feasibility
- School Closure
- The impact of school closings on illness rates
is mixed. - Modeling programs suggest that school closures
would significantly decrease disease
transmission. However, closing school for longer
than the usual periods would impact working
parents as well as have an adverse impact on the
29.5 million children who are fed through the
National School Lunch Program. - Additionally if schools are closed so should
malls, churches, and other gathering sites. If
all of these sites are closed, how will this
effect internet use? COOP planning? - Legal issues associate prolonged closing of
schools school board meeting and the need for a
quorum compensation work assignment of school
staff adequate instruction time school
populations with special needs populations
(IEPs) use of the school as a healthcare
facility (ACF) financial and governance concerns
(grants) contracts (performance clauses) and
parental communications (advance notification on
prolonged closures). L. Soronen, JD., National
School Board Association.
27Containment Units
- Biocontainment Patient Care Units (BPCU)
- One approach to containing hazardous infectious
disease in hospital settings is a BPCU. - There are 3 BPCUs in existence in the US
- Fort Detrick, MD (3 beds)
- Emory University Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia (2
beds) - University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha,
NE (10 beds)
28BPCU
- Diseases that could be handled in BPCUs include
- Smallpox
- Monkeypox
- SARS
- Avian influenza
- Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers (VHF)
29BPCUsPsychosocial and Ethical Issues
- Here are the recommendations made by the panel of
experts - Psychosocial issues should be addressed with the
patient on a regular basis - Counseling support, educ., and discussion with
the family members are important. - Personal items brought into the unit will have to
be decontaminated or destroyed - Psychiatrists should be available for diagnosis
and management of patients with more complicated
psychiatric presentations.
30BPCUsPsychosocial and Ethical Issues for Staff
- BPCU workers may experience high levels of stress
and thus MH services should be provided. - Staff training is crucial to minimize fears and
dispel misunderstandings. - Ethical Issues
- A shift away from patient centered ethics to a
more institution focused ethical standard (i.e.
reason to withhold/deny medical services)
31John L. Hick, M.D. Emergency Physician, Hennepin
County Medical Center, Chair, Metropolitan
Hospital Compact
32Alternative Care Sites
Site Selection Tool www.ahrq.gov/downloads/pub
/biotertools/alttool.xls
33Risk Communications
- To the General Public
- Simplicity
- Credibility
- Verifiability
- Consistency
- and speed count in an Emergency.
- The message must be repeated, come from a
legitimate source, be specific to the emergency,
and offer a positive course(s) of action.
34Risk Communications
- To Staff
-
- It is incumbent upon facilities to develop and
implement effective means to communicate to their
workers information regarding the outbreak,
health risks, containment strategy, and measures
to protect workers, patients, and visitors.
35Vaccines, Antivirals and Materiel Assets as of
January 5th, 2007
- Currently available in the SNS
- Antivirals
- Tamifu (oseltamivir) 21.6 million regimens with
an additional 20,500 regimens of oral suspension - Relenza (zanamivir) 84,000 regimens
- Ventilators
- PPE 49.7 million Surgical masks and 81.5 million
N95 respirators - Additional items that are projected to be
procured this year (2007) include - Antivirals
- Tamifu (oseltamivir) 7.9Â million
- Relenza (zanamivir) 6 million regimens
- Additional PPE 1.7 million Surgical masks, 23.4
million N95 respirators, face shields, gowns and
gloves - Additional ventilators
- Syringes and needles
- Prepandemic vaccine is not part of the SNS. It
was purchased by HHS and is being held by
manufacturers until needed.
36Psychological Sequale
- Traumatic Grief Child and/or Adult
- Acute Stress Disorder
- Post traumatic Stress Disorder (9 in GP)
- Depression
- Substance Abuse/Substance Withdrawals
- Exacerbation of pre-existing conditions
- In some cases alteration in Cognitive abilities.
- Increased suicide rates
- Increase in domestic abuse
- Medication issues
37Traumatic Grief
- Grief is not the same for every person.
- Normal grieving usually includes
- Social Withdrawal
- Preoccupation
- Even painful emotions
- With time, the intensity of grief subsides
- Traumatic grief is when the emotions remain high
and the individual gets stuck somewhere in the
grieving process.
38Traumatic Grief Symptoms
- Recurrent intrusive thoughts of the deceased
- Intense loneliness for the deceased
- Intense sadness, irritability, anger, or
bitterness - Persistent feeling of being dazed, or shocked
- Avoidance of activities that remind you of the
deceased - Avoidance of social gatherings
- Avoidance of places related to the death
- Traumatic Grief has sxs of PTSD, anxiety and
depression that persist over time.
39Acute Stress Disorder
- What is an Acute Stress Response?
- ASR is a transient disorder of significant
severity which develops in an - individual without any other apparent mental
disorder in response to exceptional - physical and/or mental stress and which usually
subsides within hours or days. The - stressor may be an overwhelming traumatic
experience involving serious threat to the - security or physical integrity of the individual
or of a loved person(s). The symptoms - usually appear within minutes of the impact of
the stressful stimulus or event, and - disappear within 2-3 days (often within hours).
Partial or complete amnesia for the - episode may be present. There must be an
immediate and clear temporal connection between
the - impact of an exceptional stressor and the onset
of symptoms onset is usually within a few
minutes, - if not immediate. In addition, the symptoms
- (a) show a mixed and usually changing picture in
addition to the initial state - of "daze", depression, anxiety, anger, despair,
over activity, and withdrawal may all be seen,
but no - one type of symptom predominates for long
- (b) resolve rapidly (within a few hours at the
most) in those cases where - removal from the stressful environment is
possible in cases where the stress
40Acute Stress Disorder as a Predictor of
Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms
- Acute stress symptoms were found to be an
excellent predictor of the subjects'
posttraumatic stress symptoms 7-10 months after
the traumatic event. - High levels of peritraumatic dissociation and
acute stress following violent assault are risk
factors for early PTSD. Identifying acute
re-experiencing can help the clinician identify
subjects at highest risk.
41Pre-disaster Factors for PTSD
- Gender
- Women or girls were affected more adversely by
disasters than were men or boys for which
women's rates often exceeded men's by a ratio of
21 - Age and Experience
- Middle-aged adults were most adversely
affected. Professionalism and training - increase the resilience of recovery workers,
although past trauma per se does not. - Culture and Ethnicity
- Majority groups fared better than ethnic
minority groups. There are culturally specific
attitudes and beliefs that may prevent
individuals from seeking help. - Socioeconomic Status (SES).
- Lower SES was consistently associated with
greater post-disaster distress. The effect of
SES has been found to grow stronger as the
severity of exposure increases. - Family Factors
- Married status was a risk factor for women.
Being a parent also added to the stress of
disaster recovery, mothers were especially at
risk for substantial distress. Children were
highly sensitive to post-disaster distress and
conflict in the family. When measured, parental
psychopathology was typically the best predictor
of child psychopathology.
42Pre-disaster Functioning and Personality
- Pre-disaster symptoms were almost always among
the best predictors (if not the best predictor)
of post-disaster symptoms. Persons with
pre-disaster psychiatric histories were
disproportionately likely to develop
disaster-specific PTSD and to be diagnosed with
some type of post-disaster disorder.
43Within-disaster Factors
- Bereavement during the disaster,
- Injury to oneself or a family member,
- Life threat, panic or similar emotions during the
disaster, - Horror,
- Separation from family (especially among young
people) - Extensive loss of property, relocation or
displacement. - As the number of these stressors increased, the
likelihood - of psychological impairment increased.
44Post-disaster Factors
- Stability versus change in psychological
- symptoms was largely explained by
- stability versus change in stress and
- resources.
- Attention needs to be paid to stress levels
- in stricken communities long after the
- disaster has passed
45Neurological Disorders Associated With Infectious
Diseases /or Medications Used in Tx Regiments
- Decreased IQ HIV/AIDS
- Cryptococcal Meningitis HIV/AIDS
- Cortical Dementia HIV/AIDS
- Tuberculosis Dementia excessive alcohol use,
AIDS, TB - Cerebral Toxoplasmosis AIDS
- Herpes Zoster Shingles
- Neurosyphylis untreated syphilis
46Neurological Problems
47Pre-Planned Response to Funerals
- Lesson Learned
- The family of SARS victims often were unable to
engage in traditional burial rituals. Mourners
had to stand off in a distance. - For some, there was no closure.
48Behavioral Practice Guidelines
- Do not provide formal interventions immediately
after the traumatic event. Perform Psychological
First Aid (PFA) - Screen for risk factors from those who seek
professional help. - Timely symptom based assessment.
- Provide empirically informed interventions.
- Attend to traumatic grief.
- Gray, M Litz, B Behavior
Modification 2005
49Outline of Presentation
FINISH
Responder Issues
START
Administrative Issues
Medical Clinical Issues
50Administrative Issues
- Maintaining licensing requirements
- Dealing with travel bans but needing to respond.
- Keeping income flowing (especially for private
practitioners) - Dealing with Insurance companies and sorting out
billable services.
51Outline of Presentation
FINISH
Responder Issues
START
Administrative Issues
Medical Clinical Issues
52Responder Issues
- Line of Duty Death
- Great concerns about the wellbeing of their own
family and loved ones - Forced into new and unfamiliar roles
- Health care staff accepting an altered level of
care - Triage reversal taking the least sick first
- Fear of contagion/spreading illness
53Responder Issues
- Prolonged separation from family
- Constant pressure to keep performing
- A sense of ineffectiveness
- Extreme fatigue, sadness, etc
- Dealing with issues one has not inoculated
oneself for. - Stigmatization for oneself or family members
- Dealing with a mass fatality
- Impact on special populations, State Hospitals,
prisons, jails, youth detention facilities, ICE
detention faculties
54Questions and/or Comments
55Presenter Information
- CAPT Stephen Formanski, Psy. D.
- United States Public Health Service
- ASPR/Regional Emergency Coordinator Region 3
- Merritt Chip Schreiber, Ph. D.
- Dr. Schreiber is a Reserve Corp Officer in the
USPHS as well as a UCLA psychologist working
with the Center for Public Health and Disasters,
School of Public Health and The National Center
for Child Traumatic Stress, NPIH/David Geffen
School of Medicine, UCLA.