| Literature DB >> 20025201 |
Marta Balinska1, Caterina Rizzo.
Abstract
The emergence of the novel A/H1N1 virus has made pandemic preparedness a crucial issue for public health worldwide. Although the epidemiological aspects of the three 20th century influenza pandemics have been widely investigated, little is known about population behaviour in a pandemic situation. Such knowledge is however critical, notably for predicting population compliance with non pharmaceutical interventions. This paper reviews the relevant scientific literature for the 1918-1920, 1957-1958, 1969-1969 influenza epidemics and the 2003 SARS outbreak. Although the evidence base of most non pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) and personal protection measures is debated, it appears on the basis of past experience that NPIs implemented the most systematically, the earliest, and for the longest time could reduce overall mortality rates and spread out epidemic peaks. Adequate, transparent, and targeted communication on the part of public health authorities would be also of crucial importance in the event of a serious influenza pandemic.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20025201 PMCID: PMC2762764 DOI: 10.1371/currents.rrn1037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Curr ISSN: 2157-3999
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Hand hygiene | Yes | Widely supported by literature | Antimicrobials have not been shown to be better than soap | Compliance: washing must be rigorous and routine throughout all phases of pandemic |
| Respiratory etiquette | Yes | Widely supported by literature | Need for public education | Need to sneeze into sleeve or tissue and not hand; no spitting. |
| Surgical masks for HCWs | Yes | Probably offers less protection than N95 respirators | Both surgical masks and N95 respirators should be available for HCWs | |
| N95 respirators for HCWs | Yes | Designed to stop up to 95% of small airborne particles | Both surgical masks and N95 respirators should be available for HCWs | |
| Isolation | Yes | Efficacy unsure given that viral shedding begins before symptoms | Probably useful if outbreak is short. Voluntary, home self-isolation recommended for all phases of pandemic. | Disagreement as to mandatory isolation. |
| Masks and respirators for general public | No | Relative roles of droplet vs aerosol transmission not established | Supply | |
| Social distancing measures, school closure | No | Efficacy not demonstrated | Legal and ethical problems | |
| Screening of travelers | Yes/No | Efficacy not demonstrated | Disagreement regarding usefulness and justification. |
| 1. Response should be both stratified and opportunistic |
|
|
|
| Rationing for essential prophylactic measures and resources (food, water, petrol…) | Priority should be given to: |
| HCW attendance (in absence of personal illness or caring for family member) | Develop official ethical guidelines on balancing public needs and personal risk |
| Decision-making in absence of “evidence-based” information | Decisions/actions must be well communicated and perceived to be “fair”. |
| “Social degeneration” (absenteeism, chaos, other disease outbreaks, anxiety, looting…) | Industry, business, and organization preparedness, individual household preparedness, involvement of military, mental health care resources… |