Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division...

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Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of Health

Transcript of Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division...

Page 1: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation

Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH

Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation

Virginia Department of Health

Page 2: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Outline

• Update on H5N1 and H1N1 activity– Comparison of the two

• Review of purpose and strategies for community mitigation

• Community mitigation recommendations for the new H1N1 virus situation

Page 3: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Avian Reservoir

Avian virus

Human virus

Pandemic Strain Emergence: Direct Infection vs. Reassortment

other mammals?New

reassorted virus

Direct Infection

Page 4: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Criteria for PandemicH5N1 H1N1 Criterion

√ √ Novel strain that is not recognized by the human immune system

√ X Causes increased sickness and death

X √- Sustained person-to-person transmission

Page 5: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

H5N1 vs. H1N1 Characteristics

H5N1 H1N1

Cases 423 4694

Deaths 258 53

Countries 15 30

Case-fatality 61% 1%

Year began 1997, 2003 2009

* As of May 11, 2009

Page 6: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

H1N1 in US and VA

US Virginia

Cases 2618 17

Deaths 3 0

Distribution 44 states 6 districts

Case-fatality 0.1% 0%

* As of May 11, 2009

Page 7: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.
Page 8: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Inter-pandemic phase Low risk of human cases 1

New virus in animals; no human cases

Higher risk of human cases 2

Pandemic alert No or very limited human-to-human transmission 3

Virus causes human cases Evidence of increased human-to-human transmission

4

Evidence of significant human-to-human transmission

5

Pandemic Efficient & sustained human-to-human transmission

6

WHO Pandemic Alert Phases

Page 9: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Community Mitigation

• Goal: Slow disease spread – allows time for vaccine development,

manufacturing, distribution and antiviral distribution

• Barrier: Influenza is hard to control– Short incubation period; non-specific nature of

clinical illness; easy to spread, even before symptoms

Page 10: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Community-Based Interventions

Page 11: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Community Mitigation Strategies(Non-pharmaceutical interventions)

• Infection control and hygiene• Social distancing• Community education• Cluster containment• Data collection and management to guide

decisions

Page 12: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

A Layered Approach

Individual / Household

Hand hygieneCough etiquetteInfection controlLiving space controlIsolation of illDesignated care

providerRespiratory protection

Community

Isolation of illTreatment of illQuarantine of exposedProphylaxis of exposedSchool/daycare closureSocial distancing

- Community- Workplace

Liberal leave policiesSnow daysTravel restrictions

International

Containment-at-sourceSupport efforts to

reduce transmissionTravel advisoriesLayered screening of

travelersHealth advisoriesLimited points of entry

Targeted, Layered Containment (TLC) utilizing multiple partially effective interventions

Page 13: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.
Page 14: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

What was recommended?

Infection control and hygieneIsolationPublic educationContainment of clustersSocial distancing – someUse of information to guide decisions

Page 15: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Social Distancing for H1N1

• Quarantine – consider minimizing time in crowds, isolate on first sign of illness

• Airport screening – observe & report ill• School closure – strongly consider to consider

to local decision –– Early identification of ill– Stay home with sick– Cough etiquette, handwashing– Closure at discretion of local authorities

Page 16: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Social Distancing, continued

• College/university – treat as community – isolate, cover cough, no cancelling

• Mass gatherings – – if ill, stay home– if high risk, consider risk, consider avoiding

• Business – telecommuting & snow days – not really emphasized

• [Respiratory protection – mask if ill and in public; respirator if caring for ill]

Page 17: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Use Information to Guide Decisions

• Epidemiology – studying patterns of disease in population– What is illness – case definitions– How much illness is occurring – surveillance;

testing recommendations; assess severity and spread

– What populations are affected – descriptive– What are the risk factors – analytic

• Use this information to develop prevention messages and recommendations

Page 18: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

Challenges that Arose

• Definition of community – case definition included travel to affected community

• Data release at district level – citizens wanted to know city/town

• Testing purpose and protocol – public health and clinical management

• Interpretation of recommendations – school/childcare, masks

Page 19: Update: “New Flu” Activity and Community Mitigation Diane Woolard, PhD, MPH Director, Division of Surveillance and Investigation Virginia Department of.

We’re claiming a success

Questions and Discussion