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RE: [padg] avian flu pandemic planning
The ALA Library has been collecting various references to avian flu pandemic planning at:
http://wikis.ala.org/professionaltips/index.php/Pandemic_Planning
There are already links to the documents Walter cites, plus a few more.
I'd be grateful for additions to that page (or any other page on the wiki, for that matter) ...
-- Karen Muller
Librarian and Knowledge Management Specialist
American Library Association
Toll free: 1-800-545-2433 x 5031
Direct: 312-280-5031
-----Original Message-----
From: Cybulski, Walter (NIH/NLM) [E] [mailto:Cybulskw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Monday, March 03, 2008 7:28 AM
To: padg@xxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [padg] avian flu pandemic planning
OSHA's "Guidance on Preparing Workplaces for an Influenza Pandemic"
includes a paragraph about how influenza can spread. The spread would be mainly airborne but note: "To a lesser degree, human influenza is spread by touching objects contaminated with influenza virus and then tranferring the infected material from the hands to the nose, mouth or eyes. ... The contribution of each route of exposure to influenza transmission is uncertain at this time and may vary based upon the characteristics of the influenza strain."
-Walter Cybulski
NLM
----- Original Message -----
From: Cybulski, Walter (NIH/NLM) [E]
To: padg@xxxxxxx <padg@xxxxxxx>
Sent: Mon Mar 03 07:49:29 2008
Subject: Re: [padg] avian flu pandemic planning
Hi Andy:
Unfortunately I am not at NLM today but have forwarded your question. For starters I would advise anyone seeking answers specifically related to the spread of something like avian flu to NIH pandemic flu guidance. For starters you can check http:www.pandemicflu.gov I have not seen any specific guidance that addresses the possible role of shared physical objects (eg books or other collection materials) in the spread of an aiborne virus but will try to get a response from someone quailfied to answer.
- Walter Cybulski
NLM
----- Original Message -----
From: Andrew Hart <ashart@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Preservation Administration Discussion Group <padg@xxxxxxx>; Conservation DistList <consdist@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Mon Mar 03 06:21:41 2008
Subject: [padg] avian flu pandemic planning
Apologies for cross-posting.
We are working on the library's part of a campus-wide effort to develop contingency plans for an avian flu pandemic. I would be very interested in examples anyone can share of plans or comments and observations from similar planning efforts. In particular, I'm wondering if anyone has thought about this from a preservation perspective? Of course, we'll place the highest priority on safety for people, not collections. That said, what are the potential risks to collections? If a pandemic is severe enough to warrant shutting down the university, the main preservation goals might be maintaining security, some level of preparedness for a collections disaster, and environmental control when facilities staff, the police force, and the fire department are struggling to function. At an earlier stage or in a less severe outbreak, how might we be affected? Has anyone looked into how long the
H5N1 virus can live on typical materials used for book covers? Would there be reason to quarantine books on loan to or returned from households that have people sick with the flu? If so, for how long? Will there be calls to disinfect circulating books? (Remember the way mail was treated during the anthrax scare a few years ago.) If so, what would be a reasonable response?
While this may seem like a remote risk I've found it very sobering and worrisome that our experts in public health and continuity of operations are taking this very seriously. Anyone unfamiliar with the avian flu a.k.a. H5N1 virus might be interested in the following:
http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/
Thanks in advance for any thoughts, advice, planning examples, etc. that you can share on or off the list.
Andy
Andrew Hart
Preservation Librarian
CB#3910, Davis Library
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Tel. 919-962-8047 Fax 919-962-4450 ashart@xxxxxxxxxxxxx