Center Articles and Publications
Implications of Pandemic Influenza for Bioterrorism Response Monica Schoch-Spana Clinical Infectious Diseases. 2000;31(6):1409-1413. © 2000 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. Abstract: The 1918-1919 influenza pandemic (Spanish flu) had catastrophic effects upon urban populations in the United States. Large numbers of frightened, critically ill people overwhelmed health care providers. Mortuaries and cemeteries were severely strained by rapid accumulation of corpses of flu victims. Understanding of the outbreak's extent and effectiveness of containment measures was obscured by the swiftness of the disease and an inadequate health reporting system. Epidemic controls such as closing public gathering places elicited both community support and resistance, and fear of contagion incited social and ethnic tensions. Review of this infamous outbreak is intended to advance discussions among health professionals and policymakers about an effective medical and public health response to bioterrorism, an infectious disease crisis of increasing likelihood. Elements of an adequate response include building capacity to care for mass casualties, providing emergency burials that respect social mores, properly characterizing the outbreak, earning public confidence in epidemic containment measures, protecting against social discrimination, and fairly allocating health resources. Note: Full article available on the publisher's website. Links will open in a new browser window. To return to the Center for Biosecurity of UPMC close the window in which the publication appears. |