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Sean Tracey NFPA Impact: Pandemic preparations and the fire service

Pandemic preparations and the fire service

Written by Sean Tracey   
seantracey2If your department has not already done so, it is time that you made your preparations for the anticipated pandemic. Most experts agree that we are overdue. It would stretch the existing social fabric to its capacity. Essential services such as fire and medical response would be greatly challenged with increased calls, expanded roles, and greater personal risk. It is therefore essential that emergency services personnel take the necessary precautions now so as to mitigate the impact on their communities.

Why should you be concerned? Pandemics have occurred in our past and have had devastating impacts on generation of Canadians. The Spanish Influenza of 1918 is reported to have killed between 20 and 50 million people worldwide.

Additional pandemics have occurred in 1957, 1968, and 1977. The most probable culprit would be a form of the H1N5 virus referred to as the avian influenza.

The World Health Organization has reported 261 human cases of avian influenza since 2003, resulting in 157 fatalities. Avian influenza has to this point been confined to birds and to humans who have been in close contact with infected birds. There is no indication of human-to-human spread. The great concern is that, should this virus mutate by combining with an existing flu virus, the result would be a highly contagious influenza with moderate to severe fatality rates. The pandemic would strike with very little warning, quickly spread worldwide, and vaccinations, if developed, would only be available in nine to 10 months. Health Canada's website estimates that if a moderately severe pandemic were to occur there may be between 11,000 and 58,000 deaths across Canada. (In my opinion these figures at two per cent morbidity rate for infected people are optimistic.) This says nothing of the numbers of individuals incapacitated for extended periods of time and the demand on an already overtaxed health-care system.

What will be the immediate impact on the fire service? The major impact will be high absenteeism for extended periods of time as members are either infected or remaining home to care for infected family members. The outbreak would strike quickly, with most fatalities occurring in the first 90 to 120 days. There would be a number of waves of outbreaks, with the potential for 30 to 50 per cent of the population to be infected at some point in time. Current estimates of absenteeism within the service community may be as high as 30 per cent, with the duration of the pandemic lasting up to 18 months. This has obvious impacts on the availability of career and volunteer members for normal emergency response and is complicated in that the remainder of the emergency response community will be equally stressed. Volunteer departments might be more adversely affected as the available pool of volunteers willing to risk exposure to themselves and their families may be further reduced. Medical supplies - especially personal protection items not stockpiled - will become rapidly consumed and in short supply. The best way to safeguard against these concerns is for departments of any size to have their in-house protocols reviewed, and preparations and training completed.

Fire departments need to prepare now. Some provinces have provided general information, but little appears pertinent to the fire service. There are some excellent international resources currently available for the fire service community. These include: The USFA website as of December 2006 has a draft Pandemic Influenza: Planning and Preparation Best Practices Model available at: www.usfa.dhs.gov . The IAFC website also has information and recommendations for departments. These can be found at www.iafc.org under their hot topics button. The IAFF has an excellent downloadable Powerpoint presentation at www.iaff.org . This could easily be delivered as an in-house training program.

My recommendation is that any department, regardless of size or composition, prepare for its major role in a pandemic. Municipalities should support departments in carrying out these preparations. The threat has been identified and they have a duty of care to their career or volunteer department personnel.

By being adequately prepared they can mitigate against the potential adverse impacts on their personnel and their communities. To that end I have summarized some of the major recommendations from the above resources:
  • Have your department's role clearly defined within your community's emergency response plan for a pandemic. Know what is expected of your personnel and then begin training to this role.
  • Have the necessary supplies, such as masks, gloves and disinfectant, stockpiled now as they would be in short supply during the initial stages of an outbreak. NFPA 1999 describes appropriate items.
  • Review your medical call protocols with your regional medical director specifically looking at how you handle medical calls during a potential pandemic.
  • If not already practising safe hygiene in the workplace, begin encouraging this behaviour now. Safe hygiene can reduce the potential spread. Have an infection control program that meets the minimum requirements of NFPA 1581 Standard on Fire Department Infection Control Program. All personnel should receive an annual flu vaccine.
  • Review your staffing plans and organization chart. Look at critical positions from a perspective of possibly losing up to 30 per cent of your personnel for several weeks on end.
  • Have plans for your own family in place. Experience has shown that only when the immediate family needs are covered can first responders be free to act on their responsibilities.
During the upcoming pandemic fire service personnel will become overstretched. As essential services within the community they may likely become the first point of contact with infected people. It is, therefore, essential that every department review its protocols and be prepared now. Awaiting the first signs of an outbreak would be too late.

Sean Tracey, P.Eng., is the Canadian regional manager of NFPA International and formerly the Canadian Armed Forces Fire Marshal. He may be reached at 613-830-9102, e-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .
 
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