Dawn
Levy, Stanford University
Photo credit:
L.A. Cicero
Relevant Web URLs:
Center for International Security and Cooperation:
http://cisac.stanford.edu/
Nuclear Threat Initiative:
http://www.nti.org
In 2001, anthrax-laced letters killed five people.
In 2003, the SARS epidemic revealed that Mother Nature
can
be a nasty bioterrorist herself. Future biological attacks
are unlikely to announce themselves with letters saying, "This
is anthrax - take penicillin." Instead, they may
erupt a lot like SARS, with people quickly overwhelming
an uncoordinated and deteriorating public health care
system, physician Margaret Hamburg told a Kresge Auditorium
audience May 29 during the 2003 Drell Lecture. The Center
for International Security and Cooperation sponsored
her speech, which was titled "Bioterrorism: A Challenge
to Science and Security."
"The best defense against any outbreak is robust
public health - both science and practice," said
Hamburg, who is vice president for biological programs
at the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI), which aims to
strengthen global security by preventing the spread of
nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. "While
it will never be possible to fully prepare for every
potential, imaginable threat, it is possible for our
nation to shore up its general biodefense and public
health preparedness to a level which can minimize, if
not prevent, the potentially catastrophic consequences
of the many and varied microbial threats we may have
to face."
Hamburg has served as assistant secretary for planning
and evaluation at the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services. Working as commissioner of health for New York
City from 1991 to 1997, she created the nation's first
public health bioterrorism preparedness program.
In her speech, Hamburg highlighted critical issues
that remain to be addressed as America and the world
prepare
to deal with a threat once thought to be "the stuff
of science fiction or Tom Clancy adventure novels." Today's "A-list" of
threats includes anthrax, smallpox, plague, tularemia,
viral hemorrhagic fevers and botulism.
"We need to act on the understanding that public
health is an important pillar in our national security
framework, and public health professionals must be seen
as full partners on international and national security
issues," Hamburg said. She advocated putting a public
health expert on the president's National Security Council
and having this new position rank among the leadership
of the Department of Homeland Security.
Hamburg said it is critical to remember that the front
line of response - even in a national crisis - is always
local. She recommended strengthening state and local
public health departments, which "represent the
backbone of our ability to respond effectively to a major
outbreak of disease, including a bioterrorist attack.
Yet we have never adequately supported or equipped these
public health agencies to do their job." She said
many hesitate to call the array of health structures
at the state, county and local level a public health "system" because
years of relative neglect have left them undercapitalized,
fragmented and uncoordinated.
Strengthening disease surveillance, improving medical
consequence management and supporting fundamental and
applied research will be essential in responding to a
biological weapons attack. "But these investments
will also enhance our efforts to protect the health and
safety of the public from naturally occurring disease," Hamburg
noted. "We have a chance to defend the nation against
its adversaries and to improve global public health with
the same steps."
Better disease surveillance will require training health
care providers, improving laboratory tests and improving
computer connectivity for quick collection, analysis
and sharing of information.
Developing emergency plans for treating a surge of
patients will prove challenging since the nation's
hospitals are
operating near capacity now. And private health care
providers may be limited in what they can do alone. "We
need to undertake a systemic examination of local capabilities
and how they can be rapidly augmented by state and federal
assets," Hamburg said.
Given the low probability of an attack at any one place,
it wouldn't make sense to stockpile drugs at the local
level. But Hamburg said America should continue to strengthen
its national pharmaceutical stockpile, which consists
of strategically located drugs that can be delivered
to any place in the nation within 12 hours. Responsibility
for this stockpile has been transferred from the federal
Centers for Disease Control to the Department of Homeland
Security. More work needs to be done among national,
state and local partners to develop contingency plans
for distribution, Hamburg said.
In addition, legal concerns need addressing. Which authority
can declare an emergency? In what situations can people
be quarantined or detained? Can the government compel
production of certain goods? Unresolved issues of liability
and indemnification have been especially troubling in
vaccine development and delivery for both routine and
biodefense needs.
Addressing the threat will require new partnerships
and new approaches, Hamburg said. "This will require
greater partnership and trust between the intelligence
community, law enforcement and public health and biomedical
science - not necessarily an easy or comfortable marriage.
These disciplines do not routinely work together, and
their professional cultures and practices are not easily
merged."
But today's investment in research and development will
be the foundation of tomorrow's preparedness, Hamburg
said.
That investment needs to extend beyond U.S. borders,
she said. International, collaborative health programs
can bridge a new trust among communities or nations formerly
at odds, Hamburg said, noting that the United States
has been an important participant in international initiatives
to address HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria, and has finally
paid its dues and arrears to the World Health Organization. "We
can and should use health programs as a vehicle to improve
the common good and to demonstrate - building on our
country's enormous strengths in science and medicine
- our goodwill and concern for others around the world."
The Drell Lecture was established by a grant to the
Center for International Security and Cooperation from
Albert and Cicely Wheelon in honor of physicist and arms
control expert Sidney Drell, professor emeritus at the
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. The lectureship makes
it possible for Stanford scholars and students to meet
people who play important roles in international security.