EPREmergency Preparedness & Response
- Specific Hazards
- Bioterrorism
- A–Z
- Anthrax
- Arenaviruses
- Botulism
- Brucella
- Cholera
- Ebola virus
- E. coli
- Food safety threats
- Glanders
- Lassa fever
- Marburg virus
- Melioidosis
- Plague
- Q fever
- Salmonella
- Shigella
- Smallpox
- Smallpox Basics
- Vaccine Basics
- Clinicians
- Vaccination Q & A (for professionals)
- Health Officials
- People Selected for Response Teams
- Diagnosis/
Evaluation - Lab Testing
- Infection Control
- Surveillance & Investigation
- Preparation & Planning
- Response
- Vaccination
- Images
- Medical Management
- Training & Education
- References
- Tularemia
- Typhoid fever
- Viral hemorrhagic fevers
- List by Category
- Fact Sheets
- Case Definitions
- Training
- Surveillance
- Preparation & Planning
- First Responders
- Lab Info
- A–Z
- Chemical
- A–Z
- Abrin
- Adamsite
- Ammonia
- Arsenic
- Arsine
- Barium
- Benzene
- Brevetoxin
- Bromine
- BZ
- Carbon monoxide
- Chlorine
- Chromium
- Colchicine
- Cyanide
- Digitalis
- Ethylene glycol
- Hydrazine
- Hydrofluoric acid
- Lewisite
- Melamine
- Mercury
- Methyl bromide
- Methyl isocyanate
- Nicotine
- Nitrogen mustard
- Opioids
- Organic solvents
- Osmium tetroxide
- Paraquat
- Phosgene
- Phosgene oxime
- Phosphine
- Phosphorus
- Pulmonary agents
- Ricin
- Sarin
- Saxitoxin
- Selenium
- Sodium azide
- Sodium monofluoroacetate
- Soman
- Strychnine
- Sulfur mustard
- Sulfuryl Fluoride
- Super Warfarin
- Tabun
- Tetrodotoxin
- Thallium
- Trichothecene
- Unidentified Chemical
- VX
- List by Category
- Chemical-Specific Fact Sheets
- Toxicology FAQs
- Case Definitions
- Toxic Syndrome Descriptions
- Toxicological Profiles
- Training
- First Responders
- Medical Management
- Emergency Response Cards
- Lab Info
- Surveillance
- Preparation & Planning
- A–Z
- Radiation
- Mass Casualties
- Natural Disasters & Severe Weather
- Recent Outbreaks & Incidents
- Bioterrorism
- Preparedness for All Hazards
- What CDC Is Doing
- What You Can Do
- What's New
Ricin Information for Laboratories
- CDC's Laboratory Response to Suspicious Substances
Explains how federal, state, & local agencies respond to threatening letters & how labs play a role in detection & response. - Laboratory Testing for Ricin
Brief outline of how lab testing is done on environmental & clinical samples that may contain ricin. - Chemical Terrorism Event Specimen Collection (707 KB/1 page)
- Shipping Instructions for Samples Collected From People Potentially Exposed to Chemical Terrorism Agents (102 KB/4 pages)
Word (686 KB/2 pages)
Includes illustrations & contact information.
- Share
- Add this to...
- Favorites
- Del.icio.us
- Digg
- Google Bookmarks
- Technorati
- Yahoo MyWeb
- Updates
- Subscribe
- Listen
- Content source: CDC Emergency Communication System (ECS), Division of Health Communication and Marketing (DHCM), National Center for Health Marketing (NCHM)
Get email updates
To receive email updates about this page, enter your email address:
Contact Us:
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
1600 Clifton Rd
Atlanta, GA 30333 - 800-CDC-INFO
(800-232-4636)
TTY: (888) 232-6348
24 Hours/Every Day - cdcinfo@cdc.gov