The federally funded Cities Readiness Initiative (CRI) requires seamless federal, state, and local public health coordination to provide antibiotics to an entire city population within 48 hours of an aerosolized release of anthrax. We document practical lessons learned from the development and implementation of the Boston CRI plan. Key themes center on heightened emphasis on security, a new mass protection model of dispensing, neighborhood-centric clinic site selection, online training of Medical Reserve Corps volunteers, and the testing of operations through drills and exercises. Sharing such lessons can build national preparedness.
The post-September 11 era has prompted unprecedented attention to medical preparations for national special security events (NSSE), requiring extraordinary planning and coordination among federal, state, and local agencies. For an NSSE, the US Secret Service (USSS) serves as the lead agency for all security operations and coordinates with relevant partners to provide for the safety and welfare of participants. For the 2004 Democratic National Convention (DNC), designated an NSSE, the USSS tasked the Boston Emergency Medical Services (BEMS) of the Boston Public Health Commission with the design and implementation of health services related to the Convention. In this article, we describe the planning and development of BEMS' robust 2004 DNC Medical Consequence Management Plan, addressing the following activities: public health surveillance, on-site medical care, surge capacity in the event of a mass casualty incident, and management of federal response assets. Lessons learned from enhanced medical planning for the 2004 DNC may serve as an effective model for future mass gathering events.
Thirteen patients who all had previously inserted temporary or permanent pacemakers (6, VVI; 7, A-V sequential) were studied by two-dimensional echocardiography and radionuclide gated blood pool ventriculography (RVG) for non-invasive evaluation of cardiac performance. Patients were paced in both the VVI mode and during sinus/atrial or A-V sequential pacing. Although there was no objective change of the ejection fraction during V-pacing and atrial/A-V sequential pacing or sinus rhythm, as has been previously reported, A-V sequential pacing did result in significant improvement in overall cardiac function and output as judged by radionuclide ventriculography and blood pressure response in most of our patients. An appropriately timed atrial contribution to ventricular systole resulted in improved ventricular function in those individuals with pre-existing systolic or diastolic myocardial dysfunction and/or sick sinus syndrome in whom pacemaker therapy was indicated. Radionuclide ventriculography appears to be a reliable, accurate, non-invasive method that can be used to evaluate patients before implantation of a permanent ventricular or atrioventricular pacemaker in order to decide which pacing mode is best for that particular individual.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.