Bioterrorism Threat Finds New Urgency
Source: The Boston Globe
February 3, 2001
WASHINGTON - Suddenly, the threat of bioterrorism on
American soil doesn’t seem so far-fetched anymore.
A series of anthrax hoaxes nearly shut down Canada’s
immigration department this week. At the same time, a blue-ribbon US
commission reported that an attack using nuclear, chemical, or
biological agents was likely in the United States in the next 25
years. In Cambridge, a biopharmaceutical company races toward
developing a new smallpox vaccine - in case a terrorist releases the
deadly virus.
And inside the elegant wood-paneled lecture hall of the
National Academy of Sciences in Washington, a group of distinguished
scientists and doctors yesterday discussed the possible outcomes of a
smallpox attack. The death toll, they grimly calculated, could be in
the millions.
The threat has grown along with the exponential rise in
hoaxes, hundreds of them now - including one in Western Massachusetts
last month - as well as the knowledge that several groups or nations
have been plotting to use biological, chemical, or nuclear warfare.
Perhaps the most chilling example
was the revelation a few years ago of the Soviet Union’s stockpiling
of anthrax during the Cold War, a cache that is believed still to
exist.
’’Unfortunately, a chemical or a biological terrorist
attack is something we are convinced we are more likely to see in the
next 10 to 20 years than not,’’ said Warren B. Rudman of New
Hampshire, a former US senator and cochairman of the Commission on
National Security, which called for a Cabinet-level agency to
coordinate the defense against an act of
terror.
The planned response has shifted over the last two
years, moving beyond police and the military into the realm of public
health to include teams of emergency room doctors and nurses, lab
technicians, and infectious disease specialists.
And yet, specialists say, areas of the country still
lack even the slightest protection against a terrorist strike.
’’The main focus of our concern is the local health
establishment,’’ said Joshua Lederberg, professor emeritus at the
Rockefeller University in New York and chairman of yesterday’s Forum
on Emerging Infections at the Institute of Medicine. ’’The question we
are facing is, `What levels of
insanity do we have to prepare for?’’’
To counter an outbreak of smallpox, the first infectious
disease afflicting humans ever eradicated, the preparation is immense.
Populations are no longer vaccinated, making them frighteningly
exposed to a virus that killed
300 million people in the last century.
’’To use smallpox is to attack the world,’’ said
Lederberg. ’’It may start in New York, go to Italy, and move up to
Baghdad - all in 48 hours.’’
The United States stockpiles only about 15.4 million
doses of the smallpox vaccine, enough for 7 percent of the population,
a fact that spurred the government five months ago to award a $343
million contract to Acambis Inc. of Cambridge, Mass., and Cambridge,
England, to produce 40 million
doses of the vaccine.
’’We are having to make a completely new vaccine,’’
Thomas P. Monath, Acambis’s vice president of research and medical
affairs, said yesterday. ’’Therein lies the rub: You don’t make this
overnight.’’ Monath said the company hopes to win licensing of the new
vaccine by 2004 and produce
the doses by 2005.
On another front, Massachusetts health officials
recently upgraded communications systems that connect emergency room
doctors, laboratory specialists, the FBI, fire departments, and police
in the event of a terrorist attack. During the last year, the state
received $1.2 million in federal funds to improve lab facilities,
information systems, and surveillance for an attack.
’’We had a hoax situation a couple of weeks ago in
Western Massachusetts that happened in the evening, on a weekend, and
we immediately got a team from the state lab there,’’ said Ralph
Timperi, director of the Massachusetts State Laboratory Institute and
a member of the US Centers for Disease Control steering committee on
bioterrorism.
’’The hoax involved an envelope containing powder. There
was a note claiming it contained anthrax, but it turned out to be
baking soda,’’ Timperi said, declining to give further details.
However, published reports said a letter was mailed to a
Greenfield official and similar threats against two other Greenfield
residents and a Northfield resident are being investigated.
’’What was important was that we had a team on the road
immediately,’’ said Timperi. ’’The FBI met us at the site. This is the
kind of thing that is beginning to happen routinely.’’
Not all states, though, can mobilize so quickly.
Donald A. Henderson, director of the Center for Civilian
Biodefense Studies at Johns Hopkins University, said researchers last
year checked each state to learn whether it had a health department
hot line to coordinate the response to an attack.
’’In 10 to 15 states, people said, `A hot line? What’s
that?’ They had nothing. Another 10 or so said they had them but there
were problems,’’ Henderson said. ’’One state had a 24/7 hotline, but
we had to leave a message and didn’t get a response for three days.’’
Henderson and other public health specialists said while
many states have made marked improvements in the last year, much more
needs to be done.
’’We have not in the medical and health profession come
to grips with the reality that this could happen, and if it did, that
we need to move quickly,’’ Henderson said.
In the meantime, all the work on getting ready for
bioterrorism has had some other positive benefits.
Timperi said the preparation helped in the reaction to
the outbreak of the West Nile virus last year.
This story ran on page A01 of the Boston
by John Donnelly
Globe Staff
http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/034/nation/Bioterrorism_threat_finds
_new_urgency+.shtml
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