| Literature DB >> 32655327 |
Jarunee Siengsanan-Lamont1, Somjai Kamolsiripichaiporn2, Soiratchaneekorn Ruanchaimun3, Tuangthong Patchimasiri4, Banjong Jongrakwattana4, Stuart D Blacksell3,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Global concerns over emerging and transboundary infectious zoonotic diseases have increased disease diagnostic demands, especially in the veterinary sector. In developing or newly developed countries where the sector often works under limited capacity, biosafety and biosecurity are unlikely to be high-priority issues. A recent development program supported by the Biological Threat Reduction Program of the Defense Threat Reduction Agency funded by the US government aimed to increase biosafety and biosecurity measures of government veterinary diagnostic and research laboratories in Thailand.Entities:
Keywords: Thailand; biosafety; biosecurity; challenges; veterinary laboratory
Year: 2019 PMID: 32655327 PMCID: PMC7323819 DOI: 10.1177/1535676019869771
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Biosaf ISSN: 1535-6760
Figure 1.Locations of the 11 laboratory centers included in this study.
Figure 2.CATH2 mentoring and assessment activity Gantt chart.
Example of Pre- and Post-test Assessment Questions.
| Pre- and Post-test Questions |
|---|
| Describe in your own words the definition of: |
|
Biorisk management |
|
Biosafety |
|
Biosecurity |
|
Biosafety and biosecurity risk assessment |
|
Risk mitigation |
| Explain the importance and implementation of biosafety and biosecurity risk assessment and mitigation |
The Laboratory Mapping Tool for Safety Evaluation.
| Area | Category | Subcategory |
|---|---|---|
| Administration | General | General biosafety |
| General security | ||
| Biosafety audits | ||
| Risk assessment | ||
| Pest control | ||
| Personnel health and safety | Medical (occupational health) surveillance program | |
| Vaccination/prophylaxis | ||
| Emergency documents and emergency response supplies | ||
| Formal program for accidents, adverse incidents | ||
| Training and competency | Biosafety training availability | |
| Biosafety training objectives | ||
| Staff management and training (specific to agents) | ||
| Training and competency for emergency response | ||
| Biosafety manual/standard operating procedures (SOPs) | Biosafety manual | |
| Biosafety requirements included in SOPs | ||
| Operations | Good laboratory practices | Evidence of Good Laboratory Practices (BSL-2 minimum practices) |
| Good Laboratory Practices enforcement (BSL-2 minimum practices) | ||
| Laboratory housekeeping | ||
| SOPs for cleaning and disinfection | ||
| Disinfectant use and labeling | ||
| Biological or chemical indicators (autoclaves) | ||
| Biosafety equipment maintenance | ||
| Containment | Risk assessment for biocontainment | |
| Access security measures | ||
| Training and competency for level BSL-2 agent manipulation | ||
| Biohazard signage (containment BSL-2 level) | ||
| Potentially infectious samples manipulation (level BSL-2) | ||
| Emergency response plan in case of major failure (BSL-2 level) | ||
| Containment biosafety level 3 | Infectious samples handling in a BSC (BSL-3 level) | |
| Biohazard signage (containment BSL-3 level) | ||
| Training and competency for level BSL-3 agents manipulation | ||
| Facility manager BSL-3 operations | ||
| Certification (international or national regulations) for BSL-3 operations | ||
| Annual maintenance plan for the BSL-3 laboratory | ||
| Directional negative-pressure air flow for BSL-3 ventilation | ||
| Supply and exhaust air filter for BSL-3 ventilation | ||
| Waste disposal | Waste disposal containment and rendered noninfectious | |
| Incinerator | ||
| Waste management | ||
| Sharps for disposal | ||
| Equipment and disposable materials availability | ||
| Shipping of infectious substances | Specimen reception and distribution | |
| Training and competency for infectious agent shipment | ||
| Packaging of infectious materials | ||
| Records of infectious agent shipment | ||
| Reusable secondary container for shipment | ||
| Animal facilities | Experiment or animal facility accreditation | |
| Staff accreditation for animal care and use | ||
| Animal ethics committee | ||
| Animal waste decontamination | ||
| Equipment for animal waste disposal | ||
| Medical (occupational health) surveillance program for staff working with animals | ||
| Specialized PPE for experimental animal facility | ||
| Engineering | Premises | Premises’ biological quarantine requirements |
| Local and national regulations for premises knowledge and enforcement | ||
| Premises’ comfort and level of quality | ||
| Work areas including benching and illumination quality | ||
| Handwashing sink | ||
| Access to lockers or storage shelves | ||
| Necropsy | ||
| Chemical hazard containment | Separation of chemicals | |
| Compressed gases | ||
| Liquefied gases | ||
| Radiation: personnel protection and physical protection | ||
| Radiation protection officer | ||
| Radiation spill kit | ||
| Chemical security | Chemical waste | |
| Chemicals storage | ||
| Chemical safety officer | ||
| Chemical spill kit | ||
| Emergencies | Emergency response/exercises (fire drills, spill cleanup) | |
| Emergency procedures (shower) | ||
| Biological spill kits availability | ||
| Emergency eyewash | ||
| Fire hazard | Fire detection and suppression system | |
| Fire alarms and fire drills | ||
| Fire evacuation plan, fire exits | ||
| Fire extinguishers | ||
| Electrical | Electrical equipment approval | |
| Electrical equipment testing | ||
| Electrical earthing or grounding | ||
| Response plan for power failures | ||
| Biological safety cabinet | BSC testing | |
| BSC use | ||
| BSC conformity | ||
| PPE | General situation | Risk assessment for PPE requirement |
| Risk assessment for glove selection | ||
| Availability of PPE | ||
| PPE training | ||
| Use of PPE | PPE usage and removal | |
| PPE (protective eyewear or face protection) | ||
| Common object handling in the work area | ||
| Use of PPE when working with temperature extremes | ||
| PPE disposal | Reusable PPE maintenance program | |
| Reusable PPE cleaning procedures | ||
| Laundry practices | ||
| Disposable gloves usage | ||
| Decontamination (disposal) of nonreusable PPE |
Abbreviations: BSC, biosafety cabinet; BSL, biosafety level; PPE, personal protective equipment.
Workshop Participant Job Titles.
| Position | No. | % |
|---|---|---|
| Scientist | 175 | 35.57 |
| Veterinarian | 55 | 11.18 |
| Laboratory technician | 54 | 10.98 |
| General office staff | 27 | 5.49 |
| Visiting trainee | 27 | 5.49 |
| Housekeeper | 23 | 4.67 |
| Animal husbandry officer | 18 | 3.66 |
| Maintenance personnel | 8 | 1.63 |
| Gardener | 5 | 1.02 |
| Driver | 4 | 0.81 |
| Electrician | 4 | 0.81 |
| Director | 3 | 0.61 |
| Environmental scientist | 3 | 0.61 |
| Security | 3 | 0.61 |
| Para-veterinarian | 2 | 0.41 |
| Unclassified | 81 | 16.46 |
| Total | 492 | 100.00 |
Figure 3.Comparison of pre- and post-test scores.
Figure 4.Summary of Laboratory Mapping Tool for Safety results of 2016, 2017, and 2018 for all 11 Thai veterinary laboratories.
Figure 5.Overall LMT-S scores for the 11 Thai veterinary laboratories.
Biosafety and Biosecurity Challenges, Opportunities, and Recommendations.
| Major Biosafety and Biosecurity Challenges | Recommendations for Future Program |
|---|---|
|
Harmonization and enforcement of established biosafety and biosecurity policies nationwide and consistent support from the senior management levels Budget constraints resulting in insufficient maintenance of safety equipment and compromised safety features Insufficient staff awareness and engagement on biosafety and biosecurity measures, especially at the operational levels; good laboratory practices were not strictly enforced as these were not considered as one of the top priorities |
Strongly and continuously advocate the importance and necessity of biosafety and biosecurity measures at the national and international levels to ensure continuity of policies and financial supports Establish of a regional/international collaboration on biosafety and biosecurity to provide technical and financial supports for countries in need and to set up a regional guidelines or standard that could be adapted and implemented at the national level Continuously support developments of sustainable capacity through standardization activities such as BSL-2 certification, ISO accreditation, proficiency testing, laboratory twinning program, etc Encourage changes of the organizational culture through regular in-house trainings and workshops using critical thinking activities on multifactorial risk-based approaches (recommended topics include biosafety and biosecurity principles and practices, selection and uses of personal protective equipment, risk assessment and mitigation, etc) Harmonize and encourage better understanding of the biosafety and biosecurity measures across the board via a national standard and/or regulatory requirements Provide financial and technical support for setting up and installing safety features and equipment where appropriate |
| Opportunities to further improve biosafety and biosecurity capacity | |
|
Establish safety committee with assigned biosafety officer Adequate and functional biosafety and biosecurity infrastructure, equipment, and workforce Existing standardization activities (eg, ISO accreditations) that provide foundation skills of documentation, strategic planning and standard of operations Staff members enthusiastically and actively participate in critical thinking activities to improve their safety Increasing support of senior management officers Continuing policy and financial supports to improve biosafety and biosecurity measures are critical for a long-term sustainability Biosafety plan and manual should be revised annually; drills and exercises should be practiced regularly to raise staff awareness in biosafety implementation and to identify weaknesses for improvement The biosafety manual should be specific to each laboratory/department and tasks |
Risk assessment should be practiced regularly by all staff members to engage them in critical thinking leading to behavior changes. Occupational health and safety program should be identified and standardized; pre-post exposure protocol and medical surveillance plan should be drafted and implemented Policy and financial supports to improve/upgrade infrastructure related safety features:
Electrical: Even though all centers have an emergency electrical system (generators and automatic transfer switch), an uninterruptible power supply may not be available for all; an unstable electrical supply could still affect and shorten the life of expensive equipment; installation of an uninterruptible power supply and electrical stabilizer system including a budget for maintaining the system need to be considered Access control system (key card) Smoke alarm/detector Landline telephone system Grounding system: some laboratory buildings do not have a grounding system Lack of pest control such as birds, termites, ants, etc |