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New Jersey Emergency Pharmaceutical Preparedness September 28, 2005
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New Jersey’s Emergency Preparedness Pharmaceutical System The Commissioner of Health and Senior Services has directed the development and implementation of a plan that ensures New Jersey’s healthcare system is adequately supplied with pharmaceuticals and medical supplies during any emergency. Federally supplied materials Strategic National Stockpile CHEMPACK New Jersey owned supplies Strategic State Stockpile Hospital caches
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Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) Mission: To deliver pharmaceuticals and medical materiel to the site of a national emergency
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Push Package vs. Managed Inventory (MI) For unknown or multiple threat 7-8 truck loads of medical material Prepackaged Delivered in under 12 hours For the known threat Pharmaceuticals and medical materials in quantities specifically requested by the state Delivered within 24 hours NJ received MI during anthrax events
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Oral Antibiotics IV Supplies Nerve Agent Antidotes Airway supplies Med/Surg Supplies (Clear) SNS Push Package: 130 Containers
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How SNS Assets are Deployed CDC Director Deploys SNS Assets Augments Local/State Medical Materiel Resources SNS Need for Drugs and Medical Supplies Exceeds Local & State Resources State Requests Federal Assistance In consultation with the Surgeon General, Secretary of HHS, HHS Office of Emergency Preparedness, FEMS and the FBI
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Distribution POD RSS Assets Deployed in the State
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Unit of Use Medications in 12-Hr Push Package Dispensed as unit of use 10-day Labeled Child-proof bottles Sufficient quantities to protect 200,000 Designed for the worst case – an anthrax response
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Unit of use medications in 12-Hr Push Package 10-day regimens in Push Package (approx. 15% of containers in 12-hr PP) 88,900 bottles of ciprofloxacin (#20 tab) 88,900 bottles of doxycycline (#20 tab) 24,000 bottles of amoxicillin 250mg chewable (#30 tab) for: Pregnant women Allergies to ciprofloxacin / doxycycline Children who cannot swallow whole tabs, but can chew (1,600 bottles of amoxillin 500mg chew tabs (#75 tab) IND required against anthrax
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Additional Unit of Use Drugs – Managed Inventory For large-scale events SNS has contracts to repackage - 1 million /day!
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The toxic effects of nerve agents require immediate pharmaceutical intervention followed by long-term care. This pharmaceutical intervention must be supported in both the pre-hospital and hospital phase. The ability of emergency medical personnel to begin immediate treatment of individuals exposed to nerve agents will directly affect a casualty’s ability to survive the exposure. CHEMPACK PROJECT
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CHEMPACK MISSION Implement a nationwide project for the “forward” placement of nerve agent antidotes Provide state and local governments a “sustainable resource” that increases their capability to respond quickly to a nerve agent event
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CHEMPACK Assumptions A deliberate or accidental nerve agent release can occur anywhere Any major release would probably require large supplies of nerve agent antidotes The “forward” placement of CHEMPACK assets in various locations (caches) throughout an area will expedite delivery of antidotes to the disaster site
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CHEMPACK Containers The CHEMPACK Project provides two types of containers: Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Container Designed for emergency responders; material packaged mostly in auto-injectors Hospital Container Designed for hospital dispensing, with multiuse vials, for precision dosing and long term care.
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CHEMPACK Formulary Mark 1 Kits Atropine Sulfate 0.4 mg/ml 20 ml Diazepam 5 mg/ml auto-injector Pralidoxime 1 gm inj 20 ml Diazepam 5 mg/ml vial, 10 ml vial
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Cities Readiness Initiative (CRI)
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CRI Goals Enhance the ability of cities to rapidly dispense life saving drugs to their population Dispense needed drugs to 100% of each city’s population within a 48-hour timeframe
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Assumptions An outside aerosolized release of anthrax. For the purposes of first year planning “First Responders” are defined as: Public Health Services Office of Emergency Management Law Enforcement Fire Services Emergency Medical Services
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Assumptions – cont…. Non-medical personnel will be allowed to distribute medications. The NJDHSS will receive an adequate supply of oral medications. Medications will not be available in liquid suspension form.
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CRI – NJ Goals What are the goals of the program Distribute medications to targeted population within 48 hrs. One goal, for the 1 st year of the grant is to develop a medication distribution plan targeted at a narrowly defined group of First Responders and their households members.
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STRATEGIC STATE STOCKPILE (SSS)
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Report: State Strategic Stockpile Subcommittee March 22, 2004
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Local Medical Inventory Considerations Threat Prophylactic medicines and supplies for dealing with those threats Quantity of medicines and other items needed in local inventory Location of local inventory convenient to essential personnel when needed
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Proceedings of the State MEDPREP Committee Resources Available in the State Hospitals MICUs Military V.A. State Cities
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Proceedings of the Committee Possible Scenarios for Chemical, Biological, Radiation, Nuclear and Explosive Events (CBRNE) High-Risk Locations Storage Distribution Composition Quantity Budgetary Concerns and Restrictions Final Recommendations
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Quantity To determine the quantity of antidotes needed, we estimated the number of potential victims and selected a methodology to determine the severity of an event
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To determine numbers of victims we reviewed A) the Tokyo Subway Attack (> 5500) B) the original Med Prep proposal (100,000) C) the U.S. government estimate (>10,000) D) NJ daily and emergency room visits
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FACT: roughly 8,600 daily emergency room visits to NJ Hospitals Subcommittee arbitrarily doubled this number, plus added a growth factor to come to a total of 20,000 victims for a chemical event.
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DETERMINED NEED State Stockpile for 20,000 victims for the first 48 hours after a chemical event
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TASK Develop our own model by utilizing a successfully determined model PROBLEM: there are none The Committee utilized the model developed by the Federal government for their ChemPak Program.
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Anticipated injuries in the CHEMPAK model 30% mild 40% moderate 30% severe
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AGENTS NEEDED IN A CHEMICAL EVENT Atropine Pralidoxime Diazepam Sodium Thiosulfate
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AGENTS NEEDED IN A BIOLOGICAL EVENT Ciprofloxacin Doxycycline Clindamycin Gentamicin Amoxicillin NOTE: All recommendations will allocate 20% of the total for pediatric patients
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STORAGE OF STOCKPILE HOSPITALS Chemical -- all hospitals must maintain antidotes for a minimum of 20 patients to a maximum of 200 patients Biological – all hospitals must have the capability of diagnosing and treating at least 2 patients and plans for cohorting and treating at least 20 patients
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STORAGE OF STOCKPILE REGIONAL STORAGE SITES Chemical -- LINCS or PODS HOSPITALS or state-determined locale Biological -- LINCS or PODS HOSPITALS or state-determined locale
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FURTHER ACTIONS MedPrep approves actions and methodology of subcommittee to date State provides information on budget allocated for stockpile Trauma/Burns subcommittee provides information on RNE needs Subcommittee finalizes recommendations based on approved methodology and budgetary information
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NJ’s SSS Formulary Potassium Iodide Received 722,000 doses of potassium iodide (KI) for individuals who live and/or work within ten miles of a nuclear generating station. Established dispensing sites in the areas surrounding New Jersey’s four nuclear power plants and distributed over 75,000 doses of KI Distributed fact sheets, medical counseling, and other information relating to nuclear emergencies Provided area schools, colleges and daycare centers with KI pills and information regarding KI administration Antibiotics Antibiotics for the treatment of agents associated with acts of bioterroism are stored in state and acute care hospital facilities Chemical Antidotes Acquired and pre-positioned in state Infection Control Supplies Respiratory masks, thermometers and gloves in support of communicable respiratory illness response plans
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Mass Dispensing – Points of Dispensing (POD)
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POD Site Considerations Determined by: Number of people exposed/potentially exposed Who you must treat or prophylax Site locations The event determines the number and location of sites
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Staffing the POD Types of Staff Professionals Volunteers Management & Support staff
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Staffing the POD Sources of Staff Professional Associations Licensing agencies Medical Reserve Corps (MRC)
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TOPOFF 3 Lessons Learned – RSS Operations Federal emphasis has been on Push Package, but TOPOFF emphasized Managed Inventory. NJ not prepared to receive MI in sufficient quantities Need additional floor space for MI materials LINCS agencies need additional space/ equipment for receiving MI
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TOPOFF 3 Lessons Learned RSS Operations Request process for federal assets needs to be streamlined with consistent information/input needed Must be prepared to both request and deny assets
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TOPOFF 3 Lessons Learned RSS Operations Not enough antibiotics available in suspension formulation Need instructions/educational materials for pediatric dosing using tablets
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Hippocrates
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NJ Medical Reserve Corps To develop a prepared, trained workforce of volunteers to serve the citizens of NJ in the event of a public health emergency. www.njmrc.nj.gov
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Mission Statement: To develop a prepared, trained workforce of volunteers to serve the citizens of New Jersey in the event of a public health emergency. Why does New Jersey need volunteers? The citizens of New Jersey need your help. The New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services recognizes that, in the event of a public health emergency, volunteers are our most valuable resource. New Jersey has made great strides in creating the plans and infrastructure necessary to prepare for and respond to a public health emergency. However, we need to identify a dedicated group of individuals that can be relied upon in the event of a bioterrorist or natural disaster to help put our plans into action. Home | Contact Us | MessagesMessages This system is restricted to authorized users. Random audits are routinely performed. Copyright © 2004 NJDHSS. All Rights Reserved. Why does New Jersey need volunteers? What is the NJ Medical Reserve Corps? Who can join the NJ Medical Reserve Corps? What are my responsibilities as a member? Do I have liability protection? How do I join? QUESTIONS
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