| Department of
Health and Mental Hygiene
Arlene Stephenson, Acting Secretary
Community Health Administration
Diane Matuszak, M.D., M.P.H., Director
January 6, 2003
Smallpox last naturally occurred in 1977, however,
there is a potential for the use of smallpox as
an agent of bioterrorism or biological warfare.
CDC has requested smallpox response plans from each
state and territory.
DHMH has primary responsibility for the health
of the residents of Maryland. Emergency Preparedness
activities are coordinated through the Office of
the Deputy Secretary of Health for Public Health
Services in concert with the 24 local Health Departments.
Additionally, planning activities are coordinated
with other response agencies such as Maryland Emergency
Management Agency, Maryland Institute for Emergency
Medical Services Systems (MIEMSS), Maryland State
Police and local public safety agencies. DHMH’s
Smallpox Interim Response Plan includes the following
activities:
Pre-event phase:
Event:
Developing a system to provide mass vaccinations
that
- Provides adequate locations, monitoring, safety,
storage and security. At least 30 sites have been
identified. Software provided by CDC will be utilized
for data management
- Providing adequate staff to vaccinate the entire
population of Maryland in 10 days if necessary.
This will enlist over 6000 people.
- Providing a coordinated epidemiological plan
for investigation and follow-up of contacts of
suspect cases, provide surveillance systems that
can identify cases and track outbreak to monitor
containment measure outcomes, provide adequate
vaccination strategies for outbreak containment,
provide policies for quarantine and isolation
of cases and contacts.
- Providing communications to health care providers
and the general public.
For security, safety and confidentiality reasons,
DHMH will not release specific vaccination logistics,
vaccine distribution information, county-specific
data, or information specific to individual or hospital
participation or non-participation.
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