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PANDEMIC PREPAREDNESS FOR BUSINESSES
PANDEMIC PREPAREDNESS FOR BUSINESSES
THE IMPORTANCE OF PLANNING
FOR BIRD FLU
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THE IMPORTANCE OF PLANNING FOR BIRD FLU
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Despite continuity planning for Bird Flu being such a vogue topic in the boardroom these days and there being a frightening jump in lay-offs following 'other' operational disruptions, to many business managers it is still low on their priorities list. An agenda item which never gets resolved and never seems to go away. Until It’s too late.
While many professionals view Bird Flu planning as just emergency response like any other, business continuity planning generally or, as a simply a business issue, true crisis planning is multi-faceted and should be thoroughly integrated into the Organisation’s structure and operations. This is true for Bird Flu as much as any other continuity planning. A definition of contingency planning is a possibility which must be prepared for; a future emergency. To arrive at an effective level of crisis planning requires a thorough internal analysis, strategic thinking and sufficient discussion - with everyone speaking the same langauge.
As an umbrella term, crisis planning encompasses all activities involved when a business responds to a significant incident - this includes bird flu - with an effective crisis planning program in sync with the Organisation’s mission and integrated plans covering emergency response, business continuity, crisis communications, disaster recovery, staff safety, system security, humanitarian help, etc.
Because disruptions will inevitably arise, business managers cannot shrug the responsibility planning for them by blaming the 'unpredictability' of a disruption as the reason no contingency plans were in place. Nowadays that is not acceptable, and many business managers find themselves on the job market again when the disruption results in substantial losses to the company, its stakeholders and employees. Time is now to review business continuity planning and change your plans to suit the threat.
Planning for an influenza pandemic is a prime example. When it does eventually sweep around the planet, which business manager will be able to stand up to his/her superiors and state they didn’t know it was coming so didn’t do any planning for it?
The argument that if an influenza pandemic does happen it will be such a calamity It’s not worth planning for in the first place is also flawed. It is true that everyone exposed to the virus will catch it, but the most likely scenario is that most of the population will suffer no symptoms whatsoever, a smaller percentage will suffer varying degrees of sickness but will recover completely, and only a very small percentage will lose their lives.
This doesn’t mean however that an influenza pandemic will not severely impact on every business on the planet regardless. The hype and fear alone will grind things to a halt even if the damage being done by Birdflu is only light. Experience with SARS is testament to this, where panic alone brought the economy (in Hong Kong) to a standstill even though relatively speaking only an extremely small number of persons became infected.
Bird Flu will not come and go in a few weeks. Previous global pandemics have shown they last approximately 18 months and will come in waves of three or more. Human nature is also such that once the initial panic is over people will learn to live with it and try to resume their normal lives, albeit stunted by additional precautions either self-imposed or imposed by regulators trying to inhibit the spread of infection.
This 'return to normality' could take place in a matter of weeks, and employees will want to return to the workplace if they are confident all is being done in the workplace to protect them. If a business does its planning properly, operations will resume very quickly once the panic subsides. If a business starts its planning at that point it will take much longer to recover, and perhaps never recover if much of the equipment and expertise they need is not available as prior panic buying has exhausted supplies and expertise.
These businesses will lose market share to their Bird Flu prepared competitors who are enjoying service continuity, and the business managers who did do adequate planning will not be able to defend themselves in the aftermath, when the finger pointing starts and someone 'else' needs to be burdened with blame. Make sure that isn’t you.
Tamiflu for your staff and families
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Latest Health News and Medical News posted throughout the day, every day.
| 03/03/2010 06:00 PM |
| $300,000 CIHR Grant Awarded To Medicago, The Research Institute Of The MUHC And McGill University |
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The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) have awarded a $300,000 grant for research focusing on the nature of the immune response induced by the action mechanisms of plant-made Virus-Like Particles (VLP) to Dr. Louis Vezina, Chief Scientific Officer of Medicago and to Dr. Brian Ward and Dr...
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| 03/03/2010 05:00 PM |
| Inovio Biomedical H5N1 Avian Influenza DNA Vaccine Receives Korean Approval To Begin Clinical Trials |
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Inovio Biomedical Corporation (NYSE Amex: INO), a leader in DNA vaccine design, development and delivery, announced that its affiliate VGX International Inc. (Korean Stock Exchange: 011000) has received approval in Korea to begin a Phase I clinical trial in healthy volunteers for Inovio's SynCon™ preventive DNA vaccine (VGX-3400) targeting H5N1 avian influenza...
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| 02/26/2010 05:00 PM |
| News From The Journals Of The American Society For Microbiology |
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Campylobacter Bacteria in Cattle Manure May Survive Composting Contrary to popular belief, some disease causing bacteria may actually survive the composting process...
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| 02/24/2010 06:00 PM |
| Pandemic Hybrid Of Bird And Human Seasonal Flu Possible Say Scientists |
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An international team of scientists has created a highly pathogenic laboratory hybrid of the H5N1 bird flu and human seasonal flu viruses by swapping just one gene, and propose that a similar genetic interaction could happen in nature between the current pandemic H1N1 swine flu and H5N1 avian flu strains, highlighting the importance of continued surveillance...
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| 02/23/2010 08:00 PM |
| Virus Hybridization Could Create Pandemic Bird Flu |
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Genetic interactions between avian H5N1 influenza and human seasonal influenza viruses have the potential to create hybrid strains combining the virulence of bird flu with the pandemic ability of H1N1, according to a new study. In laboratory experiments in mice, a single gene segment from a human seasonal flu virus, H3N2, was able to convert the avian H5N1 virus into a highly pathogenic form...
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| 02/23/2010 05:00 PM |
| Adamas Pharmaceuticals Announces In Vitro Data Demonstrating TCAD Therapy Is More Potent Than Double Combinations Or Monotherapy Against Resistant Flu |
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Adamas Pharmaceuticals, Inc...
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| 02/11/2010 09:00 PM |
| Voluntary System Works For Swine Flu Vaccination |
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Social interaction between neighbours, work colleagues and other communities and social groups makes voluntary vaccination programs for epidemics such as Swine Flu, SARS or Bird Flu a surprisingly effective method of disease control...
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| 02/11/2010 09:00 PM |
| Pandemic Preparedness Untested In Ontario Hospitals |
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One quarter of Ontario hospitals surveyed in a Queen's University-led study do not have an influenza pandemic plan and few plans that do exist have been tested. In addition, key players were not involved in developing the plans, and funding for pandemic preparedness was inadequate. "It's not good enough just to have a plan, you have to test it...
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| 01/20/2010 09:00 PM |
| 1918 And 2009 H1N1 Flu Probably Not Spread By Birds |
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The two strains of the H1N1 influenza virus responsible for the 1918 and 2009 global flu pandemics do not cause disease in birds. The results of the study, published in the February issue of the Journal of General Virology, also show it is unlikely that birds played a role in the spread of the H1N1 virus in these pandemics...
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| 01/14/2010 05:00 PM |
| New Research Findings Can Improve Avian Flu Surveillance Programs |
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Genetic analyses of avian influenza in wild birds can help pinpoint likely carrier species and geographic hot spots where Eurasian viruses would be most likely to enter North America, according to new U.S. Geological Survey research...
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| 01/08/2010 06:00 PM |
| NexBio Initiates Phase II Trial Of DAS181 (Fludase(R)) For Treatment Of Influenza, Including Pandemic Influenza A(H1N1) |
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NexBio, Inc. announced the initiation of a double blind placebo controlled multi-center trial in the U.S. and Mexico of DAS181 (Fludase®) for the treatment of laboratory confirmed influenza infection. DAS181 is an investigational host-targeted drug candidate that blocks entry of influenza virus into cells of the respiratory tract...
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| 01/07/2010 08:00 PM |
| Also In Global Health News: ART Access In Zimbabwe; Indonesia Bird Flu Deaths; Kenya Floods; Solomon Island Tsunami |
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Zimbabwe Wants To Boost Access To ART By End Of 2010, Health Minister Says Zimbabwe's government plans work with international organizations to increase the number of people receiving anti-retroviral therapy (ART) to 300,000 by the end of the year, up from the 180,000 who currently get the drugs, Henry Madzorera, the country's health minister, said on Tues...
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| 12/25/2009 04:00 PM |
| Compound Found To Safely Counter Deadly Bird Flu |
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The specter of a drug-resistant form of the deadly H5N1 avian influenza is a nightmare to keep public-health officials awake at night. Now, however, a study published this week (Dec...
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| 12/22/2009 06:00 PM |
| Compound Found To Safely Counter Deadly Bird Flu |
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The specter of a drug-resistant form of the deadly H5N1 avian influenza is a nightmare to keep public health officials awake at night. Now, however, a study published this week (Dec...
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| 12/22/2009 05:00 PM |
| Medicago Reports Positive Phase I Results For Its Avian Flu Pandemic Vaccine |
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Medicago Inc. (TSX-V: MDG) a biotechnology company focused on developing highly effective and affordable vaccines based on proprietary manufacturing technologies and Virus-Like Particles (VLPs), reported positive interim results from a Phase I human clinical trial with its H5N1 Avian Influenza vaccine candidate ("H5N1 vaccine")...
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| 12/07/2009 06:00 PM |
| 'Rational Drug Design' Identifies Fragments Of FDA-Approved Drugs Relevant To Emerging Viruses |
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A massive, data-crunching computer search program that matches fragments of potential drug molecules to the known shapes of viral surface proteins has identified several FDA-approved drugs that could be the basis for new medicines -- if emerging viruses such as the H5N1(avian flu) or H1N1/09 (swine flu) develop resistance to current antiviral therapies -- according to a present...
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| 12/04/2009 07:00 PM |
| Transplant Infectious Disease Experts Provide Pandemic Guidance |
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Surgeons and other healthcare professionals specialising in solid organ transplants have been issued with expert advice to guide them through the complex clinical issues posed by the global H1N1 (swine flu) pandemic...
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| 11/17/2009 04:00 PM |
| Scientists Put Interactive Flu Tracking At Public's Fingertips |
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New methods of studying avian influenza strains and visually mapping their movement around the world will help scientists more quickly learn the behavior of the pandemic H1N1 flu virus, Ohio State University researchers say...
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| 11/02/2009 04:00 PM |
| Potential Downside Of Yearly Influenza Vaccination For Children |
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An article published Online First and in the December edition of The Lancet Infectious Diseases discusses the benefits and disadvantages of vaccination for children against seasonal flu. It reports that infection with "seasonal" influenza A could in fact benefit children by giving them improved immunity against pandemic strains such as the current swine flu H1N1 strain...
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| 10/26/2009 07:00 PM |
| News From The Journals Of The American Society For Microbiology |
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Genes May Determine Susceptibility to H5N1 Avian Influenza A Virus Infection A new study found genetic variations in mice affect their susceptibility to and severity of H5N1 avian influenza A virus infection suggesting that humans who contract the virus may be genetically predisposed. The researchers from St...
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