TERRORISM /
TERRORIST THREATS and ACTS
BERTIE COUNTY EMERGENCY OPERATIONS PLAN
Reviewed / Updated:
April 07, 2016
|
|
I. |
PURPOSE
This
annex provides for protection of the public,
emergency response personnel and other emergency
personnel during disasters or events that are caused
by acts of terrorism which can lead to situations
that would cause a need for expansion of the daily
activities provided by the forces and personnel of
Bertie County.
|
II. |
SITUATION AND ASSUMPTIONS
|
|
A. |
Situation:
|
|
|
- Terrorism can be
defined as criminal acts or threats by
individuals or groups to achieve political,
social or economic gain or recognition by fear,
intimidation, coercion, or violence against the
government and its citizens.
-
Domestic acts of terrorism have been committed
in the past and are likely to occur in the
future.
-
International acts of terrorism have been
committed in the past and are likely to occur in
the future.
|
|
B. |
Assumptions:
|
|
|
-
A
large‑scale emergency may result in increased
demands on all personnel.
-
Many
injuries, both minor and relatively severe, will
be self‑treated by the public.
-
Resources available through area and regional
medical, health and mortuary services mutual aid
agreements will be provided.
-
When
local resources can no longer meet the demand of
the situation, State agencies will be contacted
to provide additional resources and/or to assume
control of the response.
-
Catastrophic terrorist events may affect large
areas of the County and response and auxiliary
resources may be damaged, destroyed, or
unavailable.
- Terrorist are
likely to deploy weapons of mass destruction
including explosives, chemical and biological
weapons.
- That it will be
unlikely that initial emergency response
personnel will know the event is linked to
terrorist activity.
- That
intelligence agencies will share information and
fully cooperate with response personnel.
-
Terrorist activity will likely include a variety
of public and private sector �targets�, such as
public buildings, nuclear plants, schools, etc.
|
III. |
CONCEPT
OF OPERATIONS
|
|
A. |
General:
|
|
|
-
Emergency operations will be an extension of
normal agency and facility duties.
-
Coordination between all agencies is necessary
to ensure emergency operational readiness.
|
|
B. |
Emergency Management:
In addition to those
responsibilities outlined in the County Emergency
Operations Plan, the Emergency Management
Coordinator shall:
|
|
|
- Be responsible
for overall coordination of the Emergency
Operations Center and the activities that occur
within the EOC.
- Is responsible
for overall plan development and the training of
personnel in the plan to ensure each is familiar
with the plan and their roles and
responsibilities.
- Be responsible
for overall coordination with state and federal
agencies likely to respond to incidents of
terrorism and shall provide lead coordination
with all local agencies as appropriate.
- Provide
communications with an coordination with local,
state and national elected officials and hold
briefings of such officials as necessary.
|
|
C. |
Health:
In addition to those
responsibilities
outlined in the County Emergency Operations Plan,
the Health Director shall:
|
|
|
-
Address the primary concern of public health
disease control and biological detection and
control. The County Department of Health will
implement effective environmental health,
nursing and health education practices to
minimize the incidence of disease as well as
biological detection and control. This service
is unique to the County and includes services to
the municipalities.
-
Conduct frequent inspections of damaged housing
and emergency shelters necessary to determine
the need for emergency repairs, pest control,
sanitation, or other protective procedures, such
as biological decontamination.
-
Inspect private water supplies as necessary by
the Health Department due to their proximity to
flood areas or a hazardous materials incident.
The Health Department will respond to requests
by residents as needed in addition to
identification of areas that may need mandatory
inspection.
-
Make
recommendations for immunizations or other
preventive measures.
- Be responsible
for the development of emergency plans dealing
with bio-terrorism, biological contaminants, or
incidents where biological agents are used or
are likely to be used and ensuring that such
personnel are trained in their roles and
responsibilities accordingly.
-
Coordinate with the North Carolina Medical
Examiners Office when essential in the event of
mass fatalities and the need for identification
and determination of cause of death. This
coordination will be a co-responsibility of the
Health Director and the County Medical Examiner.
|
|
D. |
Law Enforcement - Sheriff:
In addition to those
responsibilities
outlined in the County Emergency Operations Plan,
the Sheriff shall:
|
|
|
-
Be
responsible for investigations to determine the
extent of an incident and those responsible.
-
Collect
evidence, conduct crime scene control security
and if necessary or warranted, evacuation of the
affected area.
- Coordinate with
state and federal law enforcement agencies.
- Gather and
appropriately disseminate intelligence
information.
- Be responsible
for the development of specialized response
plans to terrorism incidents involving law
enforcement personnel and for ensuring that such
personnel are trained in their roles and
responsibilities accordingly.
|
|
E. |
Fire Service:
In addition to those
responsibilities
outlined in the County Emergency Operations Plan,
the Fire Marshal shall:
|
|
|
-
Coordinate emergency fire service response in
cooperation with the command authority of
individual responding departments.
-
Ensure the Incident Command System (ICS) will be
used.
-
Coordinate expansion of fire service capability
utilizing resources from the entire County as
well as the municipalities and mutual aid
departments.
- Be responsible
for the development of specialized response
plans to terrorism incidents involving fire
service personnel and for ensuring that such
personnel are trained in their roles and
responsibilities accordingly.
|
|
F. |
Emergency Medical Service / Rescue:
In addition to those
responsibilities outlined in the County Emergency
Operations Plan, the Emergency Medical Services
Director shall:
|
|
|
-
Take
charge of the response of emergency medical
service resources and coordinate the response of
the various rescue resources in cooperation with
the command authority of the various rescue
squads in the County.
-
Ensure the Incident Command System (ICS) will be
used.
-
Coordinate expansion of the emergency medical
service capability utilizing resources from the
entire County as well as the rescue squads and
mutual aid departments.
- Be responsible
for the development of specialized response
plans to terrorism incidents involving EMS and
Rescue personnel and for ensuring that such
personnel are trained in their roles and
responsibilities accordingly. These plans may
include field decontamination of patients,
personnel and equipment.
- Be responsible
for coordination with local hospitals regarding
response to incidents relating to patient
transportation.
|
|
G. |
Mortuary:
In addition to those
responsibilities outlined in the County Emergency
Operations Plan, the Medical Examiner shall:
|
|
|
-
Take
charge of the proper recovery of human remains
and ensure that remains are appropriately
decontaminated.
-
Coordinate with the North Carolina Medical
Examiners Office when essential in the event of
mass fatalities and the need for identification
and determination of cause of death. This
coordination will be a co-responsibility of the
Health Director and the County Medical Examiner.
-
Conduct expansion of morgue capability utilizing
resources from the state and the County.
|
|
H. |
Communications:
In addition to those
responsibilities outlined in the County Emergency
Operations Plan, the Director of Communications
shall:
|
|
|
- Be responsible
for the development of specialized response
plans to terrorism incidents involving
communications personnel and for ensuring that
such personnel are trained in their roles and
responsibilities accordingly. These plans may
include state and federal communications as well
as backup communications for primary dispatch
channels.
-
Coordination with municipal communications
resources as well as private resources that may
be used in crisis situations.
- Maintain
communications with state and federal agencies
as required and relay information about
terrorist activity or other incident related
information to the appropriate local, state and
or federal agency.
|
|
I. |
County
Manager:
In addition to those
responsibilities
outlined in the County Emergency Operations Plan,
the County Manager shall:
|
|
|
- Be responsible
for the overall cooperation of all County
agencies in any pre-terrorist event, during an
event and in recovery operations.
-
Coordination with municipal governments as well
as private resources that may be used in crisis
situations.
- Serving as chief
liaison with elected officials.
- Ensuring timely
and accurate information is presented to elected
officials and the public.
|
|
J. |
Public Information:
In addition to those
responsibilities outlined in the County Emergency
Operations Plan, the Public Information Officer
shall:
|
|
|
- Be responsible
for the development of information to be
disseminated to the public regarding terrorism
and the County plan to deal with terrorist
activity.
-
Coordination with municipal governments as well
as, hospitals and all involved agencies,
including private and volunteer organizations,
to ensure accurate information is given to the
public and the media.
- Ensure that no
information is released until it has been
authorized for release by the County Manager or
the Emergency Management Coordinator.
|
|
K. |
Other EOC Agency Representatives:
In addition to those
responsibilities outlined in the County Emergency
Operations Plan, other EOC agencies shall:
|
|
|
- Be responsible
for the development of specialized response
plans to terrorism incidents involving their
respective agency or organization, and for
ensuring that such agency personnel are trained
in their roles and responsibilities accordingly.
-
Coordination with respective local, state and
federal agencies of a similar function and
coordination with Emergency Management.
- Be prepared to
brief other officials on the activity of their
respective agency in a pre-terrorist event,
during such an event and post event.
|
IV. |
DIRECTION AND CONTROL
|
|
A. |
The
Chairman of the County Commissioners, or the person
appointed by the Chairman will assume overall
direction and control.
|
|
B. |
Emergency public health operations will be directed
from the EOC by the Health Director.
|
|
C. |
The
Medical Examiner will direct and control all
activities connected with identification of the dead
and mortuary services.
|
|
D. |
The Sheriff will direct
and control all activities connected with
investigation and security from the EOC.
|
|
E. |
The
Emergency Management Coordinator will control
activities connected with the Emergency Operations
Center and serve as the lead coordination agency for
all response organizations.
|
V. |
CONTINUITY OF GOVERNMENT
|
|
A. |
County Government
|
|
|
- Chairman -
Bertie County Board of Commissioners
- County Manager
- Emergency
Management Coordinator
|
|
|
|
|
|
B. |
Municipal Government
|
|
|
- Mayor
- Town Council or
Board
- Town Manager
|
|
|
|
|
|
C. |
Response Agencies
|
|
|
Response agencies shall
follow their normal lines of succession in
accordance to their individual agency or
organizational policy. |
|
|
|
Attachment 1
BERTIE COUNTY EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICE MASS
CASUALTY PLAN
|
|
|
|
Purpose:
The purpose
of the Bertie County EMS Incident Management Plan is
to provide medical services to civilians and other
responders in natural, or manmade, disaster
situations. EMS will provide and coordinate triage,
treatment, and transportation of sick and injured
victims at the scene of the disaster. Depending on
available resources and event duration, EMS will
also attempt to provide medical surveillance and
monitoring as needed for other responding agencies.
|
The first 30 minutes
after the occurrence of an incident are the most
critical.
Decisions made and actions taken, or not taken, will
set the stage for subsequent waves of responders.
Having a pre-determined plan to deal with
large-scale incidents and mass casualties, and
successfully executing the plan, will be the key to
effectively managing the incident.
|
For this plan to be effective, it must be practiced
regularly. EMS personnel will use the plan when
managing multiple patients with minor injuries and
whenever a helicopter LZ is established. This will
help EMS personnel, Communications, and other
responding agencies become more familiar with the
EMS MCI plan.
|
Unified
Incident Command System:
|
Bertie County EMS personnel will coordinate their
efforts with other responders under the authority of
an established incident command �team.� EMS is a
resource available to the incident command �team�
and will be automatically dispatched to any incident
where emergency medical care is known, or suspected,
to be in demand.
|
The
use of a command �team� provides agencies
responsible for managing the incident with equitable
representation in the command structure. This
ensures that all agencies operate under a common set
of incident objectives and strategies.
|
EMS
personnel will cooperate with fellow team members
from other response agencies and cooperate in the
planning and execution of all phases of the incident
management plan.
|
Mass Casualty
Incident (M.C.I.)
|
-
Definition: An
M.C.I. is any event that results in multiple
patients or victims. It can range in size and
complexity from seven (7) or more patients
spread over a small or large area at a single
location or at multiple locations.
-
Types: The type of
M.C.I. depends on the ratio of victims to EMS
resources available for providing triage,
treatment, and transportation.
-
Level One:
Any incident that can be handled with
minimal Bertie County EMS resources (i.e.,
no more than six ambulances).
-
Level Two:
Any incident that can be handled with
available Bertie County EMS resources up to
and including rescue squad and private
ambulance services (i.e., no more than
twelve ambulances).
-
Level Three:
Any incident that cannot be handled
with in-county EMS & rescue resources
(greater than twelve ambulances).
|
Simple
Triage And Rapid Treatment
(S.T.A.R.T.) |
|
The �START�
method of performing patient triage will be utilized
by all responding EMS agencies within Bertie County.
This includes all volunteer fire & rescue agencies
and private ambulance services. All patients
will be tagged with a color-coded triage tag prior
to arrival at the on-scene treatment area.
|
Requesting Activation of the Out-of-County Mutual
Aid Plan: |
|
The following
positions may request activation of, or authorize
EMS participation in the EMS Mutual Aid Response
Plan: |
|
-
EMS Director
-
On-Duty EMS
Operations Supervisor
-
EMS Training
Officer
-
On-Duty EMS Shift
Coordinator
|
|
KEY PLAN COMPONENTS |
Communications:
|
-
Dispatching of
units will be made on the primary EMS/Rescue
frequency. All out-of-county units will make
initial contact on the primary frequency also.
-
Communications
between ambulances and the hospitals shall be on
standard, designated medical communications
channels, unless otherwise directed by EMS
Command. The Transportation officer will give
numbers of victims and the condition of each as
the unit is departing from the scene.
-
On-scene EMS
operations shall be conducted small handheld
portable radios, as designated by the EMS
Command.
-
Communications
with Air MedEvac services will be conducted on
standard, designated medical communications
frequnecies.
-
It
is important that all incoming equipment have
the ability to receive instructions from EMS
Command and when directed, to proceed to the
staging area or to the incident scene.
-
All radio
communications shall be consistent with Bertie
County EMS standard operating guidelines for
radio operations.
|
|
Initial Response |
-
Communications
will estimate the initial number of transport
ambulances needed.
-
Communications
will activate EMS Group paging tones
.
-
Send
one (1) ambulance for every two (2) patients.
For example, if it is reported that ten patients
are involved, five ambulances will need to be
dispatched - this could be a combination of
private, volunteer, local EMS, and out-of-county
EMS units if necessary.
-
First arriving
unit
establishes EMS Command, provides an initial
�size up,� and begins patient triage.
-
Critical Actions:
-
Establish
command at a key location that allows good
visual assessment of the entire scene if
possible. Avoid high noise areas and
distractions if possible.
-
Quickly
determine if additional resources are
required, or if number of enroute units can
be reduced, and report this information to
Communications.
-
Determine an
area for unit staging and the best approach
to the scene.
-
Upon arrival,
next in unit(s) report to EMS
Command for assignment and will stage
vehicle in an appropriate location.
-
Critical Actions:
-
Once enroute,
contact Communications by radio for further
instructions and assignment. Keep radio
transmissions brief.
-
Arriving units
must stage appropriately to allow departing
units to leave the scene without difficulty.
Do not block vehicle entry to, or exit
from, the scene.
-
For large
scale incidents proceed directly to the
personnel and equipment staging area, be
prepared to drop additional personnel and
equipment.
-
Vehicle
drivers must stay with their ambulance at
all times.
-
Turn off all
emergency lights upon arrival.
-
Ensure that
wheeled ambulance stretchers remain in the
ambulance until ready for use.
-
ALL EMS
PERSONNEL MUST WEAR AN EMS SAFETY VEST AT A
MINIMUM � SECTION LEADERS WILL WEAR AN
APPROPRIATE SECTION COMMAND VEST.
|
Transferring EMS
Command:
|
-
Transfer of EMS
Command will occur when the next higher ranking,
or next most senior, EMS personnel arrive on
scene.
-
A face-to-face
exchange of information will occur and the
individual assuming EMS Command will notify
Communications of the transaction after command
has been transferred (example, �Communications,
(unit number) assuming EMS Command�).
|
Staging:
|
-
Initial Staging:
A location for initial staging will be
established for all MCI�s.
-
Secondary
Staging:
A secondary staging location will be established
for all Level 2 & Level 3 MCI�s.
|
|
-
Critical Actions:
|
|
|
-
Be careful not
to cause gridlock in the initial staging
area. Only the vehicles necessary to set-up
EMS Command and Triage should be located in
the initial staging area.
-
Consider using
large parking lots located near interstates
or divided highways as secondary staging
locations.
-
Churches,
schools, shopping centers, etc. make ideal
locations for secondary staging and are
generally easy to find.
-
All staging
sites should have one way in and one way out
for all traffic.
-
When moving
vehicles, avoid backing whenever possible.
If backing a vehicle is unavoidable, the
driver must have an appropriately positioned
spotter at all times.
|
Triage &
Transportation:
|
-
All patients will
be triaged using the "START"
method and will be tagged with a color-coded
triage tag prior to arrival at an on-scene
treatment area.
-
The EMS
Transportation Officer will provide transport
instructions to EMS personnel and direct
patients to ambulances for transportation.
-
DO NOT communicate
directly with the receiving hospital unless a
patient�s condition deteriorates dramatically
while enroute. The EMS Transportation Officer
will communicate directly with the receiving
hospitals.
-
You will receive
instructions from Communications regarding
re-assignment when leaving the receiving
hospital.
-
Follow the
directions of law enforcement and/or fire
personnel regarding traffic flow.
|
Management of On-Scene Conflicts:
|
It is understood that
each provider will make every effort to manage any
multi-casualty incident in an efficient, effective,
and professional manner. However, sometimes various
factors may be present which hamper these efforts.
Such factors may range from unforeseen circumstances
of the incident to poor decision-making on the part
of early on-scene personnel. These situations will
occur � it is a documented fact, evident in studies
of every mass-casualty situation in history � and no
county is immune from them! There is a right and a
wrong way to manage them, however.
|
Should any responding
agency encounter situations that they believe are
hampering their efforts, and other responders�
efforts, to provide the most effective care, the
following steps should occur:
|
-
The response
agency personnel having questions/concerns about
scene operations should:
-
Not argue with
on-scene personnel.
-
Contact your
regular duty supervisor and report the
situation.
-
The Supervisor
will contact his/her peers in the host
agency�s response jurisdiction and work out
the problem.
-
The host agency�s
response and/or incident management personnel
should:
-
Acknowledge
that mutual aid responders may operate
somewhat differently than you do on a
day-to-day basis.
-
Accept input
from mutual aid providers� supervisory
personnel.
- Do
nothing
that compromises patient care.
|
If problems cannot be
managed on scene, responders are each bound by their
local protocols and best judgment, and conflicts
will be managed post-incident through medical
review.
|
In order to minimize
the possibility of responder conflicts, agencies are
encouraged to respond a supervisor or ranking
officer along with treatment and transport personnel
for any incidents expected to be of extended
duration (i.e., 1 hour or greater in duration).
|
Section
Assignment And Duties: |
This information has been reproduced as a laminated
card and will be kept in the visor of each vehicle
in the EMS fleet. Refer to this card as a quick
reference or as a quick study guide.
|
|
EMS
Command Officer |
|
|
- Accountable for
the EMS response to an incident including not
only operations but also logistics, finance,
planning, safety, public information, and other
aspects of the local EMS system.
- Assigns lead
personnel to other sections such as staging,
triage, treatment, and transportation.
- Typically a
�White Shirt� or the most senior paramedic
present.
- Performs
accountability assessment of EMS personnel
assigned to his/her section post-incident.
|
|
EMS
Operations Officer |
|
|
- In charge of all
operational sections of the EMS response
including staging, triage, treatment, and
transportation.
- Ensures that
sections operate smoothly and that problems are
addressed early.
- Performs
accountability assessment of EMS section leaders
assigned to him/her post-incident.
|
|
Staging Officer
|
|
|
- The Staging
Officer (SO) is in charge of vehicle movement in
and out of a staging area. The SO may come from
any discipline (either EMS, fire, or law
enforcement) but should know the area including
transportation routes and road conditions.
- The SO will be
in contact with on-scene command to evaluate
what type of units and how many to send in at
what times.
- Units responding
into another county will report to the staging
area, report IN PERSON to the SO, and move at
their command. Out-of-county responding units
do not leave the staging area to return home
without clearance from the SO.
- Performs
accountability assessment of EMS personnel
assigned to his/her section post-incident.
|
|
Triage
Officer |
|
|
- This individual
is responsible for patient sorting to ensure
that the most critical patients receive
treatment and transport first.
- The individual
selected as Triage Officer in any incident
should have excellent patient assessment skills,
and must be very skilled at use of triage and
tagging systems. He/she again will likely
represent the host county's primary EMS provider
(or possibly an emergency physician) except in
unusual circumstances.
-
Out-of-county responders assigned to Triage will
work under the
command of this individual.
- Performs
accountability assessment of EMS personnel
assigned to his/her section post-incident.
|
|
Treatment Officer/Medical Officer |
|
|
- This individual
is responsible for managing patient care either
at the site of injury (if the patient cannot be
extricated), at the triage area, and in the
treatment area.
- Assigns
leadership positions for all treatment sectors.
- The Treatment
Officer will likely be a senior paramedic or
member of the command staff of the host county's
primary EMS provider (or possibly an emergency
physician).
- Out-of-county
responders assigned to Treatment will work under
the command of this individual.
- Performs
accountability assessment of EMS personnel
assigned to his/her section post-incident.
|
Roles And Responsibilities by EMS Job Title
|
This information has
been reproduced as a laminated card and will be kept
in the visor of each vehicle in the EMS fleet. Refer
to this section as a quick reference or as a quick
study guide.
|
|
EMS DIRECTOR: |
|
Fills
the EMS Command position in the ICS flow chart as
command is transferred upward. May activate regional
mutual aid plan in the event of a Level 2 or Level 3
MCI. May serve as a direct liaison to the Emergency
Operations Center.
|
|
EMS OPERATIONS
SUPERVISOR: |
|
May fill
any leadership position in the ICS flow chart up to
and including Command, Operations, Staging, Triage,
Treatment, and Transportation sections. May activate
regional mutual aid plan in the event of a Level 2
or Level 3 MCI. If off-duty at the time of callback,
may serve as a direct liaison to the Emergency
Operations Center.
|
|
EMS TRAINING OFFICER: |
|
May fill any leadership
position in the ICS flow chart up to and including
Command, Operations, Staging, Triage, Treatment, and
Transportation section. May activate regional mutual
aid plan in the event of a Level 2 or Level 3 MCI.
If off-duty at the time of callback, may serve as a
direct liaison to the Emergency Operations Center.
|
|
EMS SHIFT
COORDINATOR: |
|
May fill any leadership
position in the ICS flow chart up to and including
Command, Operations, Staging, Triage, Treatment, and
Transportation section. May activate regional mutual
aid plan in the event of a Level 2 or Level 3 MCI.
If off-duty at the time of callback, may serve as a
direct liaison to the Emergency Operations Center.
|
|
EMS
ASSISTANT SHIFT COORDINATOR: |
|
May fill any leadership
position in the ICS flow chart up to and including
Command, Operations, Staging, Triage, Treatment, and
Transportation section. If off-duty at the time of
callback, may be called upon to serve as a medical
provider in Triage, Treatment, or Transportation.
|
|
EMT-I, -II, -III: |
|
May fill any position in
the ICS flow chart up to and including Command,
Operations, Staging, Triage, Treatment, and
Transportation section. Typically will perform as a
medical provider in Triage, Treatment, or
Transportation sections.
|
|
ACCOUNTING CLERK: |
|
Responsible for
initiating emergency callback of EMS personnel for
Level 2 and Level 3 MCI�s. Callback will only be
initiated after the EMS Director requests it and
emergency callback is approved by the County
Manager.
|
Personnel
Accountability
|
EMS Personnel will be
accounted for during the post-incident stage � this
will be the responsibility of each section leader.
EMS personnel should not self-respond into areas
where rescue operations are taking place without
first requesting clearance from EMS Operations. It
is very important that EMS personnel report any
change in location at the scene of a major incident
to his/her respective section leader prior to
actually changing location.
|
EMS Rehabilitation
|
-
EMS personnel
should avoid prolonged exposure to the following
situations and should tentatively be rotated out
on the following schedule:
-
Vehicle
extrication: No more than thirty minutes at
a time in ideal situations.
-
Any MCI
Section (such as Triage, Treatment,
Transportation, etc.); no more than 3 hours
at a time in ideal situations.
-
Rehabilitation
of other Emergency Services Personnel: No
more than 3 hours at a time in ideal
situations.
-
All EMS personnel
should remain mindful of the importance of
staying hydrated and maintaining adequate food
intake during prolonged incidents.
-
Ranking EMS
officers and section leaders must monitor
personnel assigned to their area for fatigue,
possible dehydration, heat related-illnesses,
and other conditions that may affect their
performance.
|
EMS Safety
|
- The on-scene
safety officer has the authority to stop unsafe
activities in order to prevent injuries or harm.
- All EMS must be
clearly identifiable and easily seen.
- Personnel must
stage away from the scene of any violent event
until proper safety measures have been put into
place.
- All EMS
personnel must use appropriate PPE and safety
equipment during an MCI.
|
CISD/EAP
|
The leader for each
section's operations will evaluate all personnel for
signs of post-traumatic stress disorder. EMS
personnel will be encouraged to utilize available
counseling services and attend critical incident
stress debriefing.
|
S.T.A.R.T.
click on the image for a larger view
|
|
|
Attachment 2
BERTIE COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT -
BIOTERRORISM RESPONSE
PLAN
Reviewed / Updated:
March 2007
|
|
|
|
I. |
PURPOSE |
|
This appendix
provides additional information to the Bertie County
Emergency Response Plan that is specific to
bioterrorism. It sets forth the procedures and
protocols to be followed in the event of a
bioterrorist attack, real or perceived, involving a
biological agent alone or in combination with an
explosive or incendiary device, or a chemical or
radiological agent.
|
II. |
MISSION |
|
The mission of the
Local/County Public Health System is to protect the
health and safety of Bertie County�s residents by
assuring that the necessary preparedness and
response capacity exists for a bioterrorist event
affecting, or likely to affect, Bertie County.
|
III. |
GOALS |
|
The Goals of this
plan are: |
|
-
to increase the
County�s ability to detect a covert biological
attack;
-
to increase and
improve the County�s response to an overt or
covert bioterrorist attack;
-
to reduce
response time by critical municipal, county,
state, and federal agencies;
-
to reduce the
severity of injuries or disease caused by a
bioterrorist attack;
-
to reduce loss
of life due to a bioterrorist attack; and
-
to reduce the
economic impact to the County.
|
IV. |
SCOPE |
|
This response plan
is to be implemented for an act of bioterrorism
occurring or likely to occur within the geographical
boundaries of Bertie County. Additionally, the plan
may be implemented as part of a mutual aid agreement
in response to a bioterrorist event occurring in a
neighboring county or state.
|
V. |
ASSUMPTIONS
|
|
-
Local/County
Department of Public Health�s Mission and
Overall Response:
The Bertie County Health Department's mission is
to protect the health of Bertie County�s
population in a bioterrorist event to the
greatest extent possible. This translates to
the development and provision of appropriate
basic surveillance, detection and
epidemiological investigation capacity and being
able to coordinate the necessary local public
health response to a real or potential
bioterrorist attack. When additional State or
Federal resources are needed to respond to the
event, the Department, in collaboration with the
Emergency Management Director, will be
responsible for coordinating local efforts with
those of the assisting State and Federal
agencies.
In a bioterrorist event the Bertie County Health
Department initially has the lead role for all
disease related surveillance and control
measures. Enhancement of preparedness and
response capacity at the local level for an
outbreak of disease due to bioterrorism will
serve the dual function of protecting the
residents of Bertie County from naturally
occurring infectious disease outbreaks (e.g.
West Nile Virus encephalitis, influenza, etc.)
-
Multi-Agency
Cooperation:
Response to a threat or act of bioterrorism will
require the cooperation of multiple agencies.
Depending on the scope, scale and duration of
the event response may involve public (local,
state, federal) and private sector agencies. To
assure coordinated efficient response it is
imperative that local plans and protocols that
establish the roles and responsibilities of each
responding agency be developed. Memoranda of
understanding between and among agencies need to
be developed or modified and signed. Existing
agreements between potential response parties
(including those between hospitals) across
county or state borders should be reviewed to
ensure availability of critical resources and
coordinated response.
-
Response
Capabilities:
During the first 24-48 hours after an event
most response, by necessity, will be that
provided from local resources. A standardized
assessment of manpower, supplies and facilities
within each county will help to determine each
county's strengths and limitations in responding
to a major outbreak of infectious disease and
under what situations requests for additional
assistance will be needed. The response
capability of local government may be
overwhelmed by a large-scale
(multi-patient/multi-casualty) event. Similarly,
the capability of the state to respond may be
limited with a multi-site event within North
Carolina.
Federal response capabilities are finite and may
be overwhelmed in a multi-state event as
different sites compete for limited Federal
resources. Therefore, local and State response
entities must plan to be as self-supporting as
possible.
-
Bertie County
Agencies Planning:
This plan
assumes the existence of terrorism response
planning by the critical local public and
private sector agencies necessary to respond to
a bioterrorist attack.
-
Criminal
Investigation:
Bioterrorism by
definition is a criminal act. Law enforcement
shall be notified immediately once an act of
bioterrorism is suspected or
identified. Response efforts shall be
coordinated with local law enforcement and the
FBI as necessary.
|
VI. |
RESPONSE ACTIVATION
|
|
-
Assistance
Requests:
Additional assistance from neighboring counties
and states may be requested through mutual aid
agreements.
Additional assistance from private entities,
state and federal agencies, and neighboring
counties and states (when mutual aid agreements
exist) may be requested:
-
when local
resources (government response agencies
and/or medical care facilities or manpower)
necessary to respond to a bioterrorist
threat or attack are exhausted; or
-
when local
resources are inadequate, relative to the
scope, scale or duration of an event; or
-
when local
resources necessary to deal with a specific
event do not exist within local government
or the medical care communities.
-
Activation:
The Bioterrorism
Response Plan is activated for all overt or
covert acts of terrorism where the use of a
biological agent has been confirmed or is
suspected.
All confirmed
bioterrorist events will require local, state,
and federal response.
Bertie County Health Department will notify the
Bertie County Public Health System, all Critical
Agencies, Bertie County Emergency Management, NC
Public Health, and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC).
Bertie County
Public Health System and all Critical Agencies
will be activated.
Bertie County
EOC will be activated as appropriate.
NC Emergency
Management will be notified as appropriate by
Bertie County Emergency Management.
A
Joint Information Center (JIC) will be
established and Bertie County Health Department,
the CDC, FBI and NC Division of Public Health
generated information will be routed to the JIC. These
agencies will provide the JIC with information
for use in responding to inquiries about the
event.
The CDC, NC
Public Health, and Bertie County Health
Department will establish an epidemiological
investigation unit. The regional public health
response team will provide assistance as
requested.
Bertie County
Health Department will establish and maintain a
Public Health Operations Center (PHOC) with the
Bertie County Health Director or their designee
serving as Incident Commander.
A Joint
County/State Emergency Operations Center will be
established as appropriate.
Bertie County
Health Department may request outside private or
public agency assistance as necessary to respond
to an outbreak of disease. Requests for public
health assistance should be made to NCDPH/the
State Health Director.
-
Additional
Response:
In
addition to these activities the following may
occur. Bertie County Commissioners may declare a
local State of Emergency and request State
assistance. Once the Bertie County
EOC and State EOC have been activated all
requests for State assistance will go from the
local Emergency Management Coordinator to Area
Coordinators who will relay requests to the
State EOC.
|
VII. |
ORGANIZATION
|
|
-
Bertie County
Response:
Initial responders will be law enforcement,
emergency medical services, and/or fire services
in an overt or rapidly identified attack or
threat of attack. In the event of a covert
attack, the initial responders will likely be
the Bertie County Public Health System
including, but not limited to, physicians,
nurses, emergency medical services, infectious
disease specialists, medical
examiner/morticians, veterinarians, primary care
facilities, and/or medical testing laboratories.
In either situation, responders will operate
under a modified Incident Command System. As the
response increases and additional agencies
(local, State, or Federal) are involved the
organization may switch to a
Unified Command System.
-
Local
Operational Control:
The Bertie County Health Director assumes
control of the public health investigation and
response and serves as public health advisor to
the County or other official designated to lead
the overall response effort. Because a
bioterrorism incident is a criminal act that may
involve a crime scene, law enforcement may form
a joint command structure with public health. As
additional agencies become involved
representatives from these agencies will create
a UCS (Unified
Command System) where decisions will be made
jointly for ongoing and future operations. If
the FBI defines the event as an act of
terrorism, it may take control of the response.
Initially or subsequently, the Bertie County
Health Department may determine that the
location of the initial or subsequent command
posts should not be proximate to the area of
contagion or exposure. It is imperative that
law enforcement agencies understand and
accommodate the public health implications of
the situation so evidence gathering and other
law enforcement activities do not significantly
impede or interfere with the protection of the
health and safety of Bertie County residents.
-
Lead Response
Agencies:
Presidential Decision Directive #39 establishes
the FBI as lead for the crisis phase (when lives
are in imminent danger) and FEMA, as lead for
the consequence (recovery) phase of response to
terrorist events. The Governor of North
Carolina has established the Division of
Emergency Management, Department of Crime
Control and Public Safety, as the lead agency
for all state-level disaster response.
-
State
Response:
DHHS and NCDPH response will be based in the
DHHS Command Post and will, as a member of the
State Emergency Response Team (SERT), be part of
the Unified Command and maintain staff within
the State Emergency Operations Center (EOC).
NCDPH will provide epidemiological investigation
advice and support to the local public health
response through its Communicable Disease
Control Section. DHHS will assist local
responders, as necessary. If NCEM establishes a
secondary EOC proximate to the event, DHHS and
NCDPH may stage personnel at that site as well.
Additional epidemiological support personnel may
be provided through NCDPH. In the event the
disease agent is zoonotic (contagious to humans
via animals) the State Department of (DOA) may
participate in the investigation and
response. NCDPH and DHHS may request
additional support from CDC. DHSS will interact
with SERT to provide logistical support for its
response activities. Include organizational
chart for State SERT, NCDPH, etc.
-
Federal
Response:
The CDC will provide, as requested,
epidemiological and laboratory support to NCDPH.
Upon request of the Governor or designee in
consultation with NCDPH, the CDC will activate
and deploy the NPS. At the request of the CDC,
additional resources of the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services and other Federal
agencies will be made available. If the disease
agent is zoonotic in nature, the United States
Department of may become involved. Additional
Federal assistance may also be made available
through the FBI and FEMA/DHS.
-
State and/or
Federal Operational Control:
If the event is
large enough in scale or duration or otherwise
sufficiently serious to require support from
State or Federal Agencies, the UCS Operational
Command Center (OCC) will expand to include
representatives from those agencies following
the UCS. In general, state and federal agencies
will provide assistance to the local response
effort and will assume control only when
requested by local authorities or directed by a
higher authority. Once the SERT is activated,
the NCEM Emergency Operations Center (EOC)
command center will become the initial command
post for response to a terrorist event. The
Director of SERT is the SERT Leader and has
authority and responsibility for consequence
management as delegated by the Secretary of
Public Safety under NCGS
166A. If the FBI and/or DHS/FEMA are involved
in the response, they will direct emergency
response jointly with the SERT.
Once a situation
has been identified as a real or potential
bioterrorism event, the FBI has authority during
the crisis stage (while human life is at risk)
over all aspects of the criminal
investigation. DHS/FEMA assumes authority during
the consequence (recovery) stage. In many
situations the crisis and consequence stages
overlap. During that period the FBI and FEMA
will jointly share authority for the response.
|
VIII. |
IDENTIFICATION AND TRANSPORT OF THE BIOLOGICAL
AGENT, DISEASE, OR TOXIN
|
|
The identification
of the agent used in or disease resulting from an
act of bioterrorism will most likely be made
differently depending on whether the act is overt or
covert.
|
|
-
Overt Attack:
In an
OVERT ATTACK, where knowledge of the use of a
biological agent is known before or soon after
the attack, initial identification of the agent
or resulting disease or toxin may be made by:
-
First
responders (law enforcement, hazardous
materials teams, fire departments, emergency
management) trained in and equipped to
provide identification of biological
weapons;
-
Local health
care providers who identify a cluster of
illness, a syndrome, or characteristic
symptoms and signs of illness associated
with the specific agent/disease of concern;
-
Local or
state medical examiner as a result of post
mortem examination;
-
FBI;
-
North
Carolina State Laboratory of Public Health,
particularly as a result of requested
laboratory testing performed on
environmental media or biological tissues
and fluids;
-
North
Carolina Division of Public Health
epidemiologists;
-
CDC.
The State
Laboratory of Public Health or the CDC will
confirm the biological agent and/or disease,
perform antibiotic sensitivity testing and other
specialized tests as necessary, and recommend
preferred and alternative treatments. The FBI�s
laboratories may assist in the identification of
the agent, route(s) of exposure and other
factors relevant to the dissemination or
transmission of the agent.
- Covert
Attack:
Because
infectious agents require an incubation period
prior to causing disease in those exposed and
because most health care providers and others
are unfamiliar with agents of bioterrorism and
the symptoms and clinical features of the
diseases they cause, it is likely that a covert
attack with a biological agent would not result
in detection for days or even weeks after the
exposure occurred.
In a COVERT ATTACK initial identification may be
made by:
-
Local or
state medical examiner as a result of post
mortem examination;
-
Private
laboratory or laboratory operating as part
of a medical practice during routine
laboratory testing performed on
environmental media, or biological tissue or
fluids;
-
Astute local
physician or other health care provider who
suspects that symptoms and signs of illness
in an individual or group of individuals are
unusual and are compatible with exposure to
an agent associated with bioterrorism;
-
Infectious
disease specialist at a hospital or other
medical facility;
-
Epidemiologists and laboratory personnel at
local or state public health offices and
laboratories;
-
Trained
emergency medical systems personnel; or
-
Epidemiologists and laboratory personnel at
the CDC.
The CDC would
make confirmation of the biological agent,
disease, or toxin. FBI laboratories may also
confirm the identity of the agent, disease or
toxin.
-
Transport:
In either an overt
or a covert attack, collection and transport of
tissue, blood, or other samples that may contain
the agent of concern would be made in accordance
with FBI and CDC biohazard recommendations and
guidelines. These will be made available through
NCPH.
|
IX. |
NOTIFICATIONS
|
|
When a bioterrorism
event occurs or is suspected, a system of
notifications occurs within the Bertie Public Health
System and Bertie County Emergency Operations
System.
|
|
If the first
identification is made locally by a physician,
hospital, laboratory, or Medical Examiner�s (ME)
office, the Bertie County Health Department should
be notified.
|
|
The Bertie County
Health Department in turn will notify the Bertie
County Public Health System, Bertie County Emergency
Management, all critical agencies, and NC Public
Health who will then notify the CDC.
|
|
The Bertie Emergency
Management office will notify NC Emergency
Management.
|
|
In some cases the
person or entity making the original tentative
diagnosis may contact NCDPH, NCEM, NC Medical
Examiner or the CDC directly. In that case
notification would travel backwards to the local
level.
|
|
If the local ME
makes the initial diagnosis the ME will notify the
State Medical Examiner's office which, in turn,
would notify NCDPH. NCDPH will then notify the CDC,
NCEM and the local community through the Bertie
County Health Department.
|
X. |
RESPONSE PRIORITIES
|
|
The first
priorities in a bioterrorism event are: |
|
-
To protect and
preserve human life;
-
To notify all
critical local, state, and federal response
entities;
-
To conduct an
epidemiological investigation to characterize
the nature of the illness or disease outbreak
(if unknown) including symptoms, clinical signs,
mode of transmission, incubation period,
communicability; identify the agent(s) via
standard and specialized laboratory procedures,
identify the location(s) of the outbreak and
potential source(s) and route(s) of exposure(s)
and methods of control;
-
To establish and
maintain surveillance for new outbreaks of
disease;
-
To support the
medical and health care community in their
efforts to provide public health, mental health
and clinical services for those impacted;
-
To
reduce/eliminate the spread of contagion or
contamination;
-
To minimize fear
and panic on the part of the public;
-
To maintain
public confidence in the county�s ability to
respond.
|
XI. |
EPIDEMIOLOGIC
INVESTIGATION
|
|
An epidemiological
investigation seeks to identify and characterize the
illness or disease and track the condition back to
the original source(s) of exposure in the
environment. The investigation seeks to identify
the risk factors associated with exposure and
subsequent development of disease and other
variables that influence morbidity and mortality. If
exposure is ongoing, or multifocal or if the disease
is contagious, as new cases are identified, or as
the disease spreads from person to person, each new
case and their contacts must be tracked to determine
if additional sources of contagion or exposure
exist. The ultimate goal of the epidemiological
investigation is to prevent new outbreaks, contain
existing outbreaks and minimize morbidity and
mortality by preventing exposure to those who have
not been exposed, interrupting the chain of
transmission and identifying those exposed who have
not developed disease so they may receive
appropriate post-exposure prophylaxis and
treatment. Epidemiological surveillance and
investigation efforts must continue as long as new
cases occur and present for medical care, new
casualties caused by the illness are identified and
reported, or until the incubation period for the
disease in the exposed population has expired.
|
|
The level of
response, extent and duration of epidemiological
surveillance and investigation will depend on many
factors including the agent or disease suspected or
identified, incubation period of the agent, whether
or not the disease is contagious, the nature and
route(s) of the exposure to the agent, whether the
release was a limited single event, multiple or
on-going, the number potential casualties, etc.
|
|
The Bertie County
Health Department will coordinate the initial
investigation until the involvement of NCDPH and/or
CDC epidemiologists, at which time they would
provide direction and oversight of the investigation
in Bertie County. The Bertie County Health
Department will continue to coordinate investigative
efforts in Bertie County with other critical
agencies in the County. Staff from the Bertie
County Health Department will assist NCDPH (state
and regional capacities) and the CDC in
surveillance, investigation and coordination-related
efforts.
|
|
Should staff
resources in the Bertie County Health Department
prove insufficient, assistance may be requested from
other counties through the Emergency Management
Assistance Compact (EMAC) and from NCDPH. NCDPH may
request additional staff from CDC to join the
investigation.
|
XII. |
MODELING THE
POTENTIAL SPREAD OF INFECTION OR CONTAMINATION,
ESTIMATING MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY AND SUPPLEMENTING
BERTIE COUNTY AND STATE MEDICAL CARE FACILITIES�
RESOURCES
|
|
The Bertie County
Health Department in coordination with Bertie County
Emergency Management, NCDHHS Health Statistics
Division, NCDPH Epidemiology, Public Health Regional
Response Teams, NC Emergency Management and the CDC,
will model the potential spread of the agent or
disease and develop best case and worst case
scenarios with respect to morbidity and mortality.
Based on that modeling the Bertie County Health
Department and NCDPH will work with local and
regional hospitals, health care facilities, and
providers to evaluate their capacity to respond to
the disease outbreak (e.g., health care manpower,
pharmaceuticals, medical supplies, hospital beds,
facilities for administering prophylaxis, treatment
or quarantine, etc.) and their anticipated need for
additional capacity.
|
|
If that evaluation
indicates an expected shortfall in response
capacity, the Bertie County Health Department (and
appropriate critical agencies in Bertie County) and
NCPH (in conjunction with the Medical Services
Coordination Team) will assist, as requested, in the
identification of alternative resources to meet
shortages or insufficiencies in capacity. One or a
combination of the following will meet shortfalls:
|
|
-
Regional
agreements with surrounding counties to assist
each another;
-
Cooperation and
assistance provided by the North Carolina
Hospital Association (NCHA) or through mutual
assistance agreements between hospitals;
-
NC Emergency
Management through state and county mutual
assistance compacts (e.g., EMAC);
-
From the
Strategic National Stockpile (NPS) or Vendor
Managed Inventory (VMI) through the CDC
(pharmaceuticals and medical supplies).
|
XIII. |
REDUCING
THE SPREAD OF INFECTION OR CONTAMINATION
|
|
The single most
effective means of reducing the spread of infection
or contamination is to prevent further exposure to
the agent (including the environment in which it is
found and the scenarios that are known to be
associated with exposure), and if the agent is
communicable, to reduce transmission between the
infected and the non-infected. Measures taken to
achieve this may include, but are not limited to:
|
|
Hazard/Agent Identification: This involves
identifying the toxin or biologic agent present in
environmental samples or human tissue via laboratory
procedures. Pending laboratory results, a
preliminary identification may be made based on
symptoms and clinical findings in those exposed,
particularly when the clinical picture is
pathognomonic.
|
|
Hazard Assessment: Upon identification, the
adverse health effects of a known biotoxin can be
determined form appropriate scientific/medical
references. Upon the identification of a specific
infectious agent, the natural occurrence, reservoir,
mode of transmission, incubation period, period of
communicability, susceptibility and resistance to
antibiotics, and methods of control may be obtained
form appropriate scientific/medical references.
|
|
Control Methods: Control methods are
agent-specific and may be divided into preventive
measures and control measures directed toward the
case, contacts of the case and the immediate
environment.
|
|
Preventive measures
include immunizing persons at high risk of being
exposed to the agent of concern; educating those at
risk about the mode(s) of transmission and ways to
interrupt transmission; eliminating or interrupting
exposure pathways through avoidance or use of
personal protective equipment;
|
|
Control measures
directed toward the case, contacts, and immediate
environment. These include agent-specific infection
control procedures such as the use of standard
precautions and airborne, droplet, or contact
transmission-based precautions; isolation
(separation of infected persons or those believed to
be infected; usually in a hospital setting);
quarantine (enforced restriction of activities or
limitation of movement of persons presumed exposed
to a communicable disease, usually at the
community/population level, in a manner so as to
prevent contact with those not exposed); post
exposure prophylaxis and treatment of those
exposed; and killing or reducing the numbers of the
organisms in the environment of concern via washing,
disinfection, sterilization fumigation, etc.
|
|
Those exposed to
certain communicable agents may be isolated or
quarantined until it can be assured that they will
no longer pose a threat of transmission. Various
scenarios may occur depending on the agent. In
general, existing hospitals will be responsible for
caring for those acutely/seriously ill due to any
agent unless other arrangements have been made to
send these patients to a special hospital or other
treatment facility. While an outbreak of smallpox
will present some unique considerations related to
isolation and quarantine, it should be kept in mind
that cases of measles, which is much more contagious
than smallpox, are admitted and treated in community
hospitals. Possible scenarios include:
|
|
-
Quarantine of
hospitals or other facilities that have admitted
patients exposed to or infected with an agent or
diagnosed with a disease associated with
bioterrorism (e.g., smallpox), until contacts
and those potentially exposed have been
vaccinated;
-
Quarantine of
hospitals or other sites that have been directly
targeted by attack with an agent associated with
bioterrorism (e.g., smallpox);
-
Transport to
alternative care facilities those under medical
treatment, but not exposed to the bioterrorist
agent (e.g., moving less ill or unexposed
patients to another facility or area of an
existing facility to accommodate more critically
ill patients in need of specialized treatment
and care; or, moving patients out of the ICU to
other facilities to treat cases of inhalation
anthrax or botulism);
-
Transport to
alternative care facilities those exposed to or
sick from a bioterrorist agent (e.g., all
anthrax cases will be treated at hospital X or
all plague cases will be treated at hospital Y);
-
Agreed use or
procurement of facilities for evaluation or
prophylaxis and treatment (e.g., utilization of
a school, coliseum, or other facility for
distributing antibiotic prophylaxis for to those
exposed to anthrax; use of school or other
facility for vaccinating individuals against
smallpox);
-
Home-based
isolation or quarantine of exposed/infected
persons and their families (e.g., plague,
smallpox);
-
Quarantine of
all or sections of a community (e.g., pneumonic
plague, smallpox);
-
Voluntary or
ordered closings of places people gather (e.g.,
churches, schools, day care centers, theaters,
convention centers, restaurants, malls, stores,
laundromats, and parks, etc.);
-
Closing airports
to all but emergency related travel into or out
of the County (e.g. pneumonic plague, smallpox);
-
Closing all
roads, railways and other routes of travel into
or out of the impacted area or the County (e.g.
pneumonic plague, smallpox);
-
Declaring
martial law to control spread of disease, mass
panic, rioting, etc.
|
XIV. |
CRITICAL COUNTY AGENCIES RESPONSIBILITIES
|
|
Are defined in the
Bertie County Emergency
Operations Plan. (Bertie County will develop
a list of agencies critical to response to an act of
bioterrorism. These should include, but not be
limited to the following: The Bertie County Health
Dept, The Bertie County Public Health System (if no
system then other entities that are involved with
public health such as the Board of Health, local
medical society, hospitals, urgent care centers,
etc.), mental healthcare facilities, county and
municipal law enforcement agencies, municipal and
volunteer fire departments, Local Medical Examiner,
Emergency Medical Services, Emergency Management.
|
XV. |
CONTACT INFORMATION
FOR CRITICAL PERSONS
|
|
The contact information
for critical persons is called the Key Alert Roster
and is found in the Bertie County Emergency
Operations Plan under the section dealing with
activation of the Emergency Operations Center (Alert
List)
|
|
This listing is kept
updated by the Bertie County Office of Emergency
Management.
|
XVI. |
BACTERIAL AND
VIRAL DISEASE ORGANISMS/AGENTS
|
|
The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation maintain a list of agents
that are known or highly probable choices for use as
bioweapons. (www.bt.cdc.gov/Agent/Agentlist.asp)
For additional information from the CDC on
bioterrorism see its website:
www.cdc.gov/health/diseases.htm and select �B�
or "bioterrorism� from the list.
|
|
The biologic agents
of greatest concern at this time include those that
cause the following diseases: Anthrax, Smallpox,
Plague, Botulism, Brucellosis, and Tularemia. The
NCPH Infectious Disease and Bioterrorism Plan
(Appendix 7 to Annex B) of the NC EOP contains a
detailed list of references related to bioterrorism
and agents of concern.
|
|
The appendices to
the NC Public Health Bioterrorism Preparedness and
Response Plan (NC Department of Health and Human
Services) contains current hardcopy information on
biological agents of concern and the important
epidemiological and clinical features associated
with each.
|
Attachment A
|
|
DEFINITIONS AND
ABBREVIATIONS
For
the purposes of this plan the following terms shall
have the following definitions:
|
|
Alternate Care
Facility-
Identified facilities usually adjacent to or near
hospitals that can be used to augment or replace
hospitals.
|
|
Area Command-
Area Command is an expansion of the incident command
function primarily designed to manage a very large
incident that has multiple incident management teams
assigned.
|
|
Basic Plan-
The Bertie County Emergency
Response Plan.
|
|
Biological Agent-
Germs or pathogens, living microorganisms, such as
bacteria, viruses, fungi or the toxins they produce,
that can cause disease in humans, animals, or
plants, either naturally or artificially.
|
|
Bioterrorism-
The terrorist
use of microorganisms or toxins derived from
microorganisms to produce death or disease in
humans, animals or plants. |
|
Critical Agencies-
The
Bertie County Health Department, The Bertie County
Public Health System, Law Enforcement, Fire, Medical
Examiner, Emergency Medical Services, Emergency
Management, HAZMAT MAT, FBI, SBI. |
|
CDC-
The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
|
|
Decontamination
(DECON)-
The physical removal or chemical alteration or
destruction of chemical contaminants or pathogens
from personnel and equipment.
|
|
DHHS-
The North Carolina Department of Health and Human
Services.
|
|
Disease Agent-
Any pathogen capable of causing a disease.
|
|
EOC-
Emergency Operations Center.
|
|
Epidemic-
Disease attacking many people in a community or
region simultaneously or over a defined interval of
time.
|
|
Epidemiology-
The study of the causes, distribution, risk factors
associated with, and control of diseases in
populations.
|
|
Evacuation-
The removal of potentially endangered persons from
an area threatened by, or having experienced, an
incident involving the release of a chemical,
biological, or radiological material.
|
|
FBI-
Federal Bureau of
Investigation.
|
|
FEMA-
Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
|
|
Hazardous Materials-
Any material that is explosive, flammable,
poisonous, corrosive, reactive, or radioactive, (or
any combination thereof), that requires special care
in handling because it poses a hazard to public
health, safety, and/or the environment.
|
|
Hazardous Materials
Incident-
The uncontrolled non-permitted release of hazardous
materials during storage or use from a fixed
facility or during transport outside of a fixed
facility that may impact public health, safety
and/or the environment.
|
|
Incident Command
System (ICS)-
The combination of facilities, equipment, personnel,
procedures, and communications operating within a
common organizational structure with responsibility
for the management of assigned resources to
effectively accomplish stated objectives pertaining
to an incident.
|
|
Bertie County Public
Health System-
Collection of public and private organizations
contributing to public health in Bertie County.
|
|
Isolation-the
separation of a person or group of persons infected
or believed to be infected with a contagious disease
to prevent the spread of infection.
|
|
Joint Information
Center
(JIC)- The combination of two or more public
information officers from different agencies
operating within a common organizational structure
with responsibility to manage the dissemination of
information related to an incident.
|
|
Joint Operations
Center (JOC)-
The combination of two or more agencies operating
within a common organizational structure to manage
specific parts of an incident.
|
|
MSCT-Medical
Services Coordination Team
|
|
NPS-National
Pharmaceutical Stockpile- a national stockpile of
pharmaceuticals and medical supplies controlled and
managed by the CDC that may be deployed to the state
at the request of the Governor or his designee.
|
|
NCEM-
North Carolina
Emergency Management.
|
|
NCGS-
North Carolina General Statute.
|
|
NCHA-
North Carolina Hospital Association.
|
|
NCDPH-
North Carolina Division of Public Health
|
|
NCDHHS-
NC Department of Health and Human Services
|
|
OCC-
Operational Command Center.
|
|
Pandemic-
An extremely widespread international epidemic of a
single disease.
|
|
PHOC-
Public Health Operations Center.
|
|
Quarantine-
the restriction of activities or limitation of
freedom of movement of those presumed exposed to a
communicable disease in such a manner as to prevent
effective contact with those not so exposed.
|
|
Resources-
All personnel and major items of equipment
available, or potentially available, for assignment
to incident tasks on which status is maintained.
|
|
SBI-State
Bureau of Investigation
|
|
SERC-
State
Emergency Response Commission.
|
|
Staging Area-
That location
where incident personnel and equipment are assigned
on a three (3) minute available status.
|
|
Toxin-
A noxious or poisonous substance formed or
elaborated during the metabolism and growth of
certain microorganisms, capable of causing illness
and even death in those exposed (e.g., botulinum
toxin results in botulism).
|
|
Unified Command-
In ICS, Unified Command is a unified team effort
which allows all agencies with responsibility for
the incident, either geographical or functional, to
manage an incident by establishing a common set of
incident objectives and strategies. This is
accomplished without losing or abdicating agency
authority, responsibility or accountability. |
|