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FDA Consumer magazine

March-April 2007

 

HHS Unveils Two New Efforts to Advance Pandemic Flu Preparedness

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in cooperation with departments and agencies across the federal government, have announced two new efforts designed to improve state, local, and community preparedness for a potential influenza pandemic, which can occur when a new strain of flu appears for which people have no immunity.

The CDC released new guidance on community planning strategies that state and local community decision-makers, as well as individuals, need to consider based on the severity of an influenza pandemic. These strategies are important because the best protection against pandemic influenza—a vaccine—is not likely to be available at the outset of a pandemic. Community strategies that delay or reduce the impact of a pandemic, also called Wnon-pharmaceutical interventions, may help reduce the spread of disease until a vaccine that is well-matched to the virus is available.

The CDC guidance, released on Feb. 1, 2007, was developed in collaboration with other federal agencies and public health and private partners. The federal government has undertaken many efforts in the last few years to encourage and strengthen the nation's pandemic influenza preparedness, and this guidance builds upon previously released planning documents and guidelines.

"The threat of a pandemic continues to be real. We need to continue helping state and local decision-makers determine some of the specific actions they could take during the course of a pandemic to reduce illness and save lives," said HHS Secretary Mike Leavitt. "An important consideration for action is the severity of a pandemic once it emerges. The new CDC guidelines are a step forward in that direction."

The new guidelines focus primarily on community-level measures that could be used during an influenza pandemic in an effort to reduce the spread of infection. In order to help authorities determine the most appropriate actions to take, the guidelines incorporate a new pandemic influenza planning tool for use by states, communities, businesses, schools, and others. The tool, a Pandemic Severity Index (PSI), takes into account the fact that the amount of harm caused by pandemics can vary greatly, with that variability having an impact on recommended public health, school, and business actions.

The PSI has five different categories of pandemics, with a category 1 representing moderate severity and a category 5 representing the most severe. The severity of a pandemic is primarily determined by its death rate, or the percentage of infected people who die. A category 1 pandemic is as harmful as a severe seasonal influenza season, while a pandemic with the same intensity of the 1918 flu pandemic, or worse, would be classified as category 5.

On the basis of the projected severity of the pandemic, government and health officials may recommend different actions communities can take in order to try to limit the spread of disease. These actions, which are designed primarily to reduce contact between people, may include

While these actions could significantly reduce the number of persons who become ill during a flu pandemic, they each carry potentially adverse consequences that community planners should anticipate and address in their planning efforts. The guidance describes many of these consequences, and provides planners with initial recommendations on strategies to address them. These recommendations may be revised in the coming months based on feedback that the government will seek from a variety of specific communities, including the private sector, education community, faith- and community-based organizations, and the public health community.

HHS also unveiled a number of new radio and television public service announcements (PSAs) featuring information on pandemic influenza. The PSAs encourage people to learn more about pandemic influenza and to know more about their state and local community's efforts to prepare for a potential pandemic.
Visit www.pandemicflu.gov to view the PSAs and the community planning guidance.

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