2 October 2008
US to make antibiotics available for postal workers
and household members as CRI preparedness for anthrax
On October 1st the US
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced that antibiotic kits
could be made available to eligible postal letter carriers and members of their
households for potential future use in the event of an anthrax emergency. These oral antibiotics would be used to
protect the letter carriers who could be called upon to deliver additional
antibiotics directly to the homes of person in the general population who may
have been exposed to anthrax as part of one or more
bioterrorist attacks.
Use of letter
carriers to deliver antibiotics has been discussed as part of the US
government’s “Cities Readiness Initiative
(CRI) since its inception in 2004. The CRI has more than doubled in size
since 2004 such that it now includes 72 major US cities/metropolitan
areas. One of the primary goals of the
CRI is to deliver appropriate antibiotics to the entire exposed population
(e.g., to aerosolized anthrax spores) population “within 48 hours of the
decision to do so”.
As the point of
contact for the Washington, DC Department of Health at the beginning of the
Cities Readiness Initiative in the spring of 2004, one can appreciate the major
obstacles faced from the beginning when trying to implement a realistic
feasible plan to distribute all needed antibiotics within 48 hours.
This
long-discussed action of providing antibiotic kits for letter carriers, and
their household members. is an important step forward in this regard. Even so, the
road ahead is still long.
Daniel R. Lucey, MD,
MPH
EROne Institutes,
Washington Hospital Center
Georgetown University
Medical Center
Washington DC
Website for this
posting: www.BePast.org
e-mail:DRL23@Georgetown.edu