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Experts
Doubt US is Ready
for Biowarfare
Attack
Excerpt By Will Dunham, Reuters
Health
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - The first sign of trouble might be rather mild--people
showing up at doctors' offices or hospital emergency rooms with
runny noses, teary eyes, headaches and fevers.
Only the sheer
number of these patients, not the severity of the initial symptoms,
might suggest that something unusual is afoot.
But the progression
of these flu-like symptoms over a period of days into worse problems,
such as bleeding, internal and external lesions, and labored breathing,
might provide the first proof of the unspeakable: an attack on
a civilian population with biological weapons. In such an event,
untold thousands of people could suffer agonizing deaths.
That scenario
was offered by experts on Monday amid mounting concern after the
September 11 attacks on New York and Washington that the United
States is poorly prepared to deal with an attack involving disease-causing
micro-organisms or lethal chemicals.
``In a worst-case
scenario, a biological attack could be considered the most horrible
of all in terms of a hostile effort against a population,'' said
Leonard Cole of Rutgers University in Newark, New Jersey, whose
books on biological and chemical warfare issues include ``The
11th Plague: The Politics of Biological and Chemical Warfare.''
DOMINO EFFECT
``And that's
because, at least theoretically, every person who becomes infected,
if it is with a certain kind of micro-organism, himself becomes
a biological weapon who can infect others, and you get kind of
a domino effect,'' Cole said.
America is
unprepared to handle an attack with a biological weapon harnessing
deadly viruses and bacteria or a chemical weapon that ravages
the human nervous system, experts said.
For example,
the people who may be the first to respond to a biological weapon
attack--the primary-care physicians--have not been included in
any meaningful way in planning efforts, said Michael Osterholm,
director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious
Disease Research and Policy.
``At this
point, we're woefully short in vaccines and antibiotics. The public
health infrastructure is but a shell of what it needs to be able
to respond. And public health has continued to be overlooked in
most of the kinds of funding that have occurred to date in terms
of trying to prepare us for terrorism,'' Osterholm said.
The nightmare
scenario for government officials planning responses to unconventional
domestic attacks is the introduction of a biological agent such
as anthrax, smallpox or a small list of diseases into a densely
populated area, perhaps by dumping a mist or powder over a city
from a low-flying, slow-moving, small airplane.
``SILENT KILLERS''
Frank Cilluffo
of the Center for Strategic and International Studies called biological
weapons ``silent killers'' because it could take days or weeks
for symptoms to manifest themselves. An attack could remain unknown
for some time unless the perpetrators announced it.
Because no
one would know what had happened, many people who had been exposed--say,
to an infectious disease such as smallpox--might unwittingly spread
the virus to many more victims who had initially been spared.
Experts believe
the two most likely biological agents would be anthrax--a deadly
bacterial disease spread by spores and generally confined to sheep,
cattle, horses, goats and pigs--and smallpox--a viral scourge
that killed millions of people throughout the centuries until
it was declared eradicated worldwide two decades ago.
Anthrax kills
about 90% of those it infects but is not spread from person to
person. Smallpox kills only about 30% of those it infects but
is alarmingly infectious.
The two most
likely chemical agents, experts said, would be nerve gases such
as sarin or VX, which short-circuit the nervous system, and mustard
gas, which causes deadly internal and external blistering.
HIGH DEATH
TOLLS
``A well-placed
and effective chemical agent could clearly (cause) thousands of
deaths,'' Osterholm said. ``A well-placed and effective biological
agent could (cause) hundreds of thousands of deaths.''
Various government
reports document failings in official preparations for domestic
attacks with biological or chemical weapons. The US Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, the agency that would be in charge
of nailing down the nature of a germ outbreak in the hours and
days after an attack, concedes that the public health system right
now is unable to detect and respond to a biological attack.
Congressional
investigators have reported in the past 2 years that ``the US
ability to effectively respond to chemical or biological terrorist
incidents is compromised by poor management controls and the lack
of required items,'' such as good vaccines and medical supplies.
One report
found that government stockpiles included expired medicines. Another
found that supplies were being stored at too high a temperature.
``We're unprepared.
I'm not going to lie and say that we would handle it well,'' said
Cilluffo of the Strategic and International Studies think tank.
Reference
Source 89
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