Overview
September 2001 ushered in a new era in public health preparedness.
Following the devastating attacks on September 11, the possibility
of bioterrorism became a reality with the intentional distribution
of a deadly form of Bacillus anthracis through our
mail system. Twenty-two people were diagnosed with anthrax
and five of them died. What role did public health play in
preventing additional cases? What was done right? What could
be done better? Join us as we share Arlington, Virginia's
response to the anthrax crisis, their best practices, and
the lessons they learned.
Goal
To provide information on current strategies in bioterrorism
preparedness and discuss the lessons learned from the response
to the 2001 anthrax terrorist events.
Objectives
- Identify three lessons learned from the 2001 response
to the anthrax cases.
- Describe the key elements of public health's response
to bioterrorism.
- Identify three public health resources available to health
departments to prepare for bioterrorism.
Target Audience
Public health leaders, managers, and professionals from
local and state health departments, federal agencies, hospitals,
clinics, academic institutions, emergency management services,
and others who are involved in planning a response to the
threat of bioterrorism
No presenter except for Dr. Rex Archer has a financial
interest or other relationship with manufacturers of commercial
products, providers of commercial services, or commercial
supporters. Dr.
Archer is a co-developer of the software package Cerner HealthSentry,
but it will not be discussed during this program .
No presenter in this program will discuss the unlabeled
use of commercial products or products for investigational
use.
|