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For an index
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- EPA Report
Buries a Revelation -
Daily News, December 31, 2002
- Vaccine
Plan Is Full of Holes
- Daily News, December 23, 2002
- Fears
Raised About Smallpox Vaccination Plan - OccupationalHazards.com, December 16, 2002
- Perspective
on the Tragedy at the World Trade Center - American Journal of Industrial Medicine, December
2002
- Union
Advocates Call for Safeguards As CDC Readies Smallpox Vaccine
Plan - Occupational Safety
and Health Reporter, November 28, 2002
- One Year
Later, 9/11 Health Concerns Linger - AFT On Campus, October 18, 2002
- Congressman:
OSHA's 9/11 Response Endangered Workers - Occupational Hazards, September 30, 2002
- Ready
or Nor, Disasters Happen
- Online Journal of Issues in Nursing, September 30, 2002
- Dusting
off Manhattan: A year after 9/11, worries about toxic dust plague
residents - MSNBC, September
9, 2002
- The Air
Down There: A year after the attacks, concerns linger over the
long-term health effects on residents and rescue workers who
breathed in contaminated air
- Newsweek Web Exclusive,
September 6, 2002

EPA
Report Buries a Revelation
By Juan Gonzalez
Daily News
December 31, 2002
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/local/story/47707p-44880c.html
Emission of dioxins in and around
Ground Zero in the two months following the World Trade Center
collapse were "likely the highest ambient concentrations
that have ever been reported," according to a report released
last week by the federal Environmental Protection Agency.
This revelation is buried on
page 77 of a 160-page report that the agency released last week.
The report is titled "Exposure
and Human Health Evaluation of Airborne Pollution from the World
Trade Center Disaster" and was authored by the EPA Office
of Research and Development in Washington.
It is the most comprehensive
study on pollution in and around Ground Zero. The report, dated
October 2002, was not released until Friday, between the Christmas
and New Year's holidays, when it was unlikely to get much media
attention.
Asked about the unusual timing,
an EPA spokeswoman in Washington said: "This is a draft
report. We really weren't trying to slide it under the door.
The sooner the draft is released the more time there will be
for public comment."
EPA's press release and the media
coverage over the weekend have focused on the report's most comforting
conclusion - that most neighborhood people and office workers
who returned to their homes and jobs after Sept. 17 were "unlikely
to suffer short-term or adverse health effects" from contaminants
in the air.
But the report also says that
thousands of people who were caught in the huge dust clouds on
Sept. 11, or who inhaled the air around Ground Zero in the first
few days afterward, were "at risk for immediate acute [and
possibly chronic] respiratory and other types of symptoms."
No immediate sampling
Health officials have no way
of telling how toxic those initial clouds were, the report says,
because major sampling of the Ground Zero environment did not
begin for some toxics until Sept. 14 and for others until Sept.
23.
As for dioxin, a product of uncontrolled
combustion, unprecedented levels were even found several blocks
beyond Ground Zero, in areas that were reopened to the public
one week after the attack.
At a monitoring station on Park
Row near City Hall Park, for instance, dioxin levels between
Oct. 12 and 29 averaged 5.6 parts per trillion/per cubic meter
of air, or nearly six times the highest dioxin level ever recorded
in the U.S., according to the report.
Dioxin levels at the Ground Zero
rubble pile itself were much higher. According to the report,
"from the first measurement day of Sept. 23 through Nov.
21, [levels] show unambiguous elevation, with concentrations
ranging from about 10 to 170" parts per trillion.
That, says the report, is "between
100 and 1,500 times higher than typically found in urban air."
EPA scientists who wrote the
report concluded that there was "minimal concern" for
excess cancers because the high levels only lasted about two
months and because dioxin exposure is usually associated with
ingesting dioxin-contaminated food rather than inhalation.
But not all public health experts
agree.
"Those air levels are outrageous,"
said Dr. David Carpenter one of the nation's top dioxin specialists
and former dean of the School of Public Health at State University
of New York at Albany. "There's a very significant health
danger here."
Others who have reviewed the
report criticize its emphasis on sampling for toxics in outdoor
air.
"They're assuming that residents
would be walking in the general ambient air and never disturbing
settled dust," said Carrie Loewenherz of the New York Committee
for Occupational Safety and Health, a labor union health group.
According to Lowenherz, a comprehensive
study should include data on indoor air tests and on contaminant
levels in settled dust.
The EPA report acknowledges that
"evaluating the indoor environment in more depth" is
one of several future areas of study.
"EPA's Region 2 office is
continuing studies of indoor air," said Washington-based
EPA spokeswoman Suzanne Ackerman. "It was more a question
of priorities, and the outdoor air was what people were most
concerned about at first."
© 2002 Daily News, L.P.

Vaccine Plan Is Full of Holes
By Jonathan Bennett
Daily News Oped
December 23, 2002
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ideas_opinions/story/45707p-42990c.html
President Bush plans to vaccinate
500,000 health care workers against smallpox and then make the
vaccine available to the general public. Before the inoculations
begin, the government must answer some tough questions about
the side effects and the cost.
According to official estimates,
roughly one-third of the people receiving the vaccine are likely
to be made sick enough to miss one or two days of work. And those
estimates may paint a mistakenly rosy picture, because they are
based on the pre-1970 experience with a population that was largely
immune to smallpox.
Who is going to carry the financial
burden of the roughly 250,000 work days that health care workers
will lose? As it stands now, the workers will have to take sick
days or lose a day's pay or two, a significant burden. The government
should agree to cover these losses in advance.
The smallpox vaccine is the most
dangerous human vaccine there is. According to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, seven to 26 of the health care
workers vaccinated in the first wave are likely to develop life-threatening
complications. Who will cover their medical expenses, and who
will compensate the families of those who die? The federal government
has an obligation to shoulder that responsibility now, before
the shots begin.
According to the CDC, people
with immune systems compromised by medication or disease shouldn't
be vaccinated, including people with HIV/AIDS. But what about
the estimated 500 health care workers to be vaccinated in the
first wave who are HIV-positive but don't know it?
Anyone vaccinated will pose a
hazard for two weeks to anyone he or she comes into close contact
with, like family members and co-workers. Who will cover the
medical expenses and lost time of people with secondary infections?
As it stands now, no one.
If there is a possibility that
enemies of the U.S. could release smallpox here, the nation needs
a vaccination plan that doesn't make the threat worse. The plan
should require employers to give confidential counseling about
the vaccine's hazards and give employees the option of refusing
without that decision being disclosed to anyone and without retaliation
against employees who decline.
The federal government's refusal
so far to deal with any of these questions might be an act of
omission, but there is one indication of actual bad faith: The
CDC has flouted a two-year-old federal law that requires the
use of safer needles and ordered 50 million needles with no safety
device, even though at least one manufacturer produces a smallpox
vaccination needle with the device built in.
This contemptuous attitude toward
the safety and economic security of health care workers must
stop immediately.
Bennett is the public affairs
director of the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and
Health.

Fears Raised about Smallpox Vaccination
Plan
By Sandy Smith
OccupationalHazards.com
December 16, 2002
http://www.occupationalhazards.com/full_story.php?WID=5294
A number of healthcare and worker organizations have questions
about the administration's plan to limit the threat of a terrorist
attack involving smallpox by vaccinating frontline workers.
The vaccinations, once given
to children as a matter of course, have turned into a life-threatening
menace, if you listen to some critics and even some cautious
fans of the plan.
The plan, announced Saturday
by President George W. Bush, involves the formation of smallpox
response teams, who, as volunteers will receive the smallpox
vaccination. The group will include healthcare workers and other
first responders. The Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) will work with state and local governments to form these
volunteer teams, who will be expected to provide critical services
to the public in the event of a smallpox attack.
Also included in the plan are
Department of Defense and State Department personnel. The Department
of Defense (DOD) will vaccinate certain military and civilian
personnel who are or may be deployed in high threat areas. Some
United States personnel assigned to certain overseas embassies
will also be offered vaccination.
"The nation needs a smallpox
vaccination plan that doesn't make the threat worse. I'm sorry
to say that the president's plan doesn't meet that standard,"
said William F. Henning Jr., chair of the Board of Directors
of the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health
(NYCOSH).
"Under the president's plan,
half a million civilians are going to be in the first wave of
people vaccinated," continued Henning. "Every one of
them is a worker, and they must get at least as much protection
from the vaccination process as they get from any other on-the-job
hazard."
None of those essential protections
is included in the president's plan, said Henning, adding that
before the inoculations begin, the government needs to answer
some tough questions about the vaccine's side-effects and their
costs.
Critics of the plan note that
by the government's estimates, one-third of the people vaccinated
are likely to be made sick enough to miss a day or two of work.
Employers, and in some cases, the workers themselves will be
expected to shoulder the cost of the lost work time.
Also by the government's estimates, between seven and 26 of the
healthcare workers vaccinated in the first wave are likely to
develop life-threatening side effects. One of them is likely
to die. Henning and other suggest the federal government should
agree, in advance, to cover the cost of medical care for side
effects and lost work-time.
The government acknowledges that the vaccine is so dangerous
that people with compromised immune systems should not take it
at all. That includes people with HIV/AIDS, because the vaccine
could kill them. How is the federal government going to protect
the estimated 500 healthcare workers in the first wave who are
scheduled for the inoculation and who are HIV-positive, but don't
know it?
People who are vaccinated will "shed" the live virus
that is used for the vaccine for two weeks, exposing anyone they
come into close contact with, such as a housemate or a co-worker,
to a virus that could kill anyone with a compromised immune system.
Critics question how they are going to be protected, and who
will cover their medical expenses.
Critics question who is going to insure that the screening process
that employers use to avoid vaccinating people who should not,
or don't want to be vaccinated is confidential and does not result
in employees suffering retaliation or discrimination?
Critics point out the federal government just purchased 50 million
vaccination needles that lack any device to protect a healthcare
worker from getting stuck with a used needle, even though safer
needles are on the market. A federal law urging health care organization
to use safer needles has been on the books for two years.
The federal government is not recommending vaccination for the
general public at this time, but acknowledges there may be some
members of the general public who insist on being vaccinated.
In fact, anyone knowingly exposed to smallpox has two to three
days to be vaccinated to prevent an outbreak and the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention has pledged to make vaccine
available anywhere in the United States within 12 hours.
Dr. Julie Gerberding, director
of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, participated
in a press conference announcing the plan on Dec. 14. She said,
in part, "By offering smallpox vaccine to the first people
who have to step up to the plate and respond, we know that we
can strengthen the ability of our states and our communities
to protect the public in that kind of a situation."
As the government moves forward
to implement the president's plan, it's important to note several
things, said Gerberding. "First of all, we know how to fight
smallpox
. Second, the smallpox vaccine is the best protection
we have against smallpox, but it is not the only protection.
Infection control measures, and especially isolation of infected
people, also help prevent transmission. And these measures can
help protect when people cannot or choose not to be vaccinated.
Finally, but most importantly, as this program unfolds vaccine
safety is a top priority. We intend to do everything that we
can to minimize the risk and reduce the number of serious adverse
reactions to the vaccine."
Soon after the Sept. 11 attacks,
HHS began working to expand the national stockpile of smallpox
vaccine. The United States currently has sufficient quantities
of the vaccine to vaccinate every single person in the country
in an emergency.
While voicing support for the
president's plan, the American Medical Association (AMA), though
trustee Timothy T. Flaherty, M.D., did say the association plans
to "closely monitor the data on issues such as adverse reactions
to the vaccine, inadvertent transmission to others, and the question
of medical furlough. We are also working with the Department
of Health and Human Services to ensure that vital federal liability
protections are in place prior to the initiation of any smallpox
vaccination program."
According to Flaherty, "The
need for further voluntary vaccination beyond front-line health
care workers and military personnel is a very complex issue.
Any future plans for voluntary vaccination beyond the current
ACIP recommendations will need to be reassessed using the information
and scientific data available at that time."
The AMA voted Dec. 4 to take
a cautious approach to any national smallpox vaccination program,
urging the federal government to wait for good science before
ordering vaccinations for all U.S. citizens. The group estimated
vaccinating every American could result in as many as 300 deaths.
The American Nurses Association
(ANA), which represents many of the frontline healthcare workers
slated to be given the vaccine, has some concerns about the plan.
"We are well aware that
there is a pressing need to be prepared against the possibility
of a bio-terrorist attack," said ANA President Barbara A.
Blakeney, MS, APRN,BC, ANP.
"Since 1998, the ANA has
been involved in developing strategies for educating the nation's
2.7 million registered nurses to respond in the event of such
an attack. ANA also is working closely with the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services (DHHS), to develop the National
Nurse Response Teams for just such an event," she added.
"However, we want people
to be able to make an informed decision about whether or not
they should get vaccinated against smallpox, and I do not believe
we have the answers we need to make that informed decision,"
she said.
The smallpox vaccine, which was
routinely administered to Americans until 1972, is a highly effective
protection against the disease when given before or shortly after
exposure to the virus.

Perspective
on the Tragedy at the World Trade Center
By Joel Shufro
American Journal of Industrial Medicine 42:557-559 (2002)
December 2002
PDF version
No one was prepared for the tragedy
that occurred on September 11th. The loss of life, the collapse
of two enormous buildings were overwhelming. No one could have
been fully prepared. Agencies with responsibility for protecting
the public health did the best they could, working day and night
under the most difficult conditions. They triaged; dealing with
what they thought were the worst risks first.
Our government has rarely invested
enough money in building the infrastructure for environmental
health and occupational health. In fact, we have dis-invested
over the last two decades in those agencies that have responsibility
for public health. We were not only unprepared and overwhelmed,
agencies with responsibility to respond to such crises were,
and still are, underfunded and understaffed.
The extraordinary circumstances
of the collapse demanded an extraordinary response from our government.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (OSHA), Public Employees Safety and
Health (PESH),the New York Department of Health (NYDOH), New
York City Environmental Protection Agency (NYCEPA) all attempted
to use regulatory frameworks of rules and regulations that are
inadequate to protect the health and safety of workers and community
residents in good times. In the context of the collapse of the
Twin Towers it was apparent that they were ill-prepared to adequately
protect the health of workers and community members.
The New York Coalition for Occupational
Safety and Health (NYCOSH) has concerns relating to the failure
of government agencies to utilize their own rules and regulations
to protect and educate the public.
Let me list some of our concerns:
1. There is a need for a new
regulatory framework regarding potentially toxic exposures:
Despite reassuring comments by
these agencies (e.g., Christine Todd Whitman, www.epa.gov/wtc/stories/
headline), workers in and around Ground Zero and office workers
and community residents whose apartments and offices were contaminated
by dust were exposed to toxic substances that posed a threat
to their health and safety. In each case, the applicable standards
were outdated or non-existent. Whether we are talking about EPA's
definition of asbestos containing material (1%) or OSHA's asbestos
standard, the standards do not protect workers or community residents.
Government standards are a compromise between the scientists
and industry; they are not based solely on the science.
The crisis did reveal significant
gaps in these regulations. First, for office workers returning
to contaminated offices, there was no re-occupancy protocol.
Workers who returned to work had no recourse but to rely on their
employer's assertions that their offices were cleaned appropriately.
We are aware that some offices were properly abated, but we also
know that many offices were not (Wall Street Journal, citations
here). Second, residents, including those with young children,
were left to their own devices; they were given minimal guidance
on what constituted a "safe environment." The EPA,
disclaiming any responsibility for indoor contamination, deferred
to the New York City Department of Health, which advised apartment
dwellers to clean up by using a mop and wet rags.
2. Rather than use their position as a bully pulpit to provide
the public with information they could use to make informed decisions,
the agencies saw their role as reassuring the public or said
little.
From the outset, government agencies,
including EPA, OSHA, PESH and the New York City Department of
Health, made reassuring statements about the safety of the environment
without adequate data. These statements, as one official bluntly
told me off the record, were designed to "reduce hysteria,"
they were designed for crowd control.'' Although
some agency staff tried their best to qualify, clarify and disavow
the statements of their agency heads, the agencies themselves
never retracted their initial reassuring statements. The discrepancy
between these official statements and the illnesses experienced
by workers and community residents created a serious credibility
gap that has not been closedand in our estimation has bred
contempt and cynicism, if not derision, among the public and
in important segments of the public health communities.
The EPA, OSHA, and PESH now presume
that the dust released by the collapse of the Twin Towers including
asbestos-containing material. However, it was not until early
February that OSHA, for example, made this presumption public
and then only in a letter responding to an inquiry from the Laborers
International Union of North America. There was no public warning
and the agency took no step to publicize this critical information.
Why didn't OSHA, EPA or the New York City Department of Health
hold a press conference and put out best practice protocols for
cleaning up offices that would, at a minimum, give office workers
and residents a standard to which they could have held their
employers? A public announcement about the asbestos-containing
character of the dustin English and Spanishmight
have had dramatic impact on the day laborers who were hired to
clean up lower Manhattan office buildings without appropriate
equipment and no training.
3. The absence of strong enforcement
and leadership on the part of EPA, OSHA, PESH, the New York City
Department of Health and New York City Department of Environmental
Protection resulted in unnecessary exposure of workers and community
residents to toxic substances. We also believe that such action
has set a bad precedent.
I will give one example. OSHA
claimed it lacked jurisdiction in a rescue operation under the
National Response Plan which prevented them from enforcing their
standardsa position we believe is legally incorrect. During
the entire cleanup operation, no OSHA standards were enforced
on the site. We are concerned about the precedent OSHA set by
failing to enforce the law and its standards on the World Trade
Center site. Our understanding of the law requires the agency
not to interfere with a rescue operation. However, it does not
require the agency to suspend enforcement of its regulations
as OSHA did. While the agency devoted considerable resources
to insure that work at this dangerous site proceeded safelyand
it is truly an achievement that no one was killed on this jobwe
are greatly concerned that this model returns us to the pre-OSHA
days of voluntary compliance. We understand that extraordinary
times require extraordinary measures. But extraordinary circumstances
are not an excuse for a government agency to violate the law
and weaken worker protections.
We are also concerned that the
partnership that OSHA entered into with the unions on the site
does not follow its own criteria and compromises worker protections.
We fully trust that the unions on the site are representing the
interests of their members, but again, we believe this is a bad
legal precedent and OSHA does not have the authority to enter
into agreements that violate its own directives.
Congressman Jerrold Nadler and
the EPA Ombudsman, Robert Martin have detailed during hearings,
the EPA's failure to fulfill its legal mandate. New York City's
Department of Environmental Protection, which claims that dust
from the Trade Center must be presumed to be asbestos-containing
material and must be treated as asbestos has received approximately
35 filings for asbestos abatement jobs in lower Manhattan. Yet
the Department has not issued one, not one, violation.
4. A need for uniform sampling protocols and a centralized collection
of all testing results.
From the outset, there was confusion
about appropriate testing protocols. We do not believe that the
sampling strategy was adequate or test results were fully reported
to the public. For example, the EPA relied almost exclusively
on the results of outdoor sampling to characterize riska
method which does not provide an adequate characterization of
indoor risk levels. Currently, testing is being done in buildings
throughout the area by private companies, but there is no central
repository to which the data is being reported or being mapped.
We have learned that there is mercury contamination at 90 Church
Street and that there is dioxin contamination in buildings owned
by Manhattan Borough Community College, but there is not a systematic
gathering of data of private testing so we can understand the
patterns of exposure or contamination. The public is entitled
to all of the data in real time and presented in an understandable
manner so that people can make informed decisions.
5. Government agencies appear
to have ignored their own precedents.
Twelve years ago, when asbestos-containing
material contaminated buildings in Gramercy Park as a result
of a steam pipe explosion, the New York City Department of Health
declared a public health emergency, evacuated buildings, wrapped
the buildings in plastic to prevent the dust from contaminating
the area, sent in professional asbestos abatement cleaning companies
and took five months to clean the apartments. The percentage
of asbestos in the mud which was sprayed into buildings from
the explosion was the same as that found in samples from the
World Trade Centeronly in Gramercy Park it is estimated
that 200 pounds of asbestos was released whereas it is estimated
that approximately 5,000 tons of asbestos was released at the
World Trade Center.
EPA intervention in Libby, Montana
provides a dramatic contrast to its posture here in New York
City. While conditions are qualitatively different than in the
area surrounding the World Trade Centerthe difference between
the protocols followed in the two cities raises important questions.
For example, in Libby, the EPA has spent more than $30 million
in the last 2 years to decontaminate the outdoor environment
in Libby, Montana. The EPA is expected to shortly declare a public
health emergency in Libby in order to gain the authority to decontaminate
private homes. In lower Manhattan, by contrast, EPA has only
recently, after intense pressure, established an indoor air task
force to examine the contamination of indoor air.
A driving force and priority
in this crisis was to re-open the downtown area especially Wall
Street. Public health was not government's main priority when
the Mayor announced that Wall Street would be open the following
Mondayonly six days after the collapse. These decisions
were made at the highest levelsprobably at the White House.
Politics, not public health, was in command.
The AFL-CIO's poster for Worker
Memorial Day for 2002 is a photograph of workers at Ground Zero.
We do not know when the shot was taken. Not one worker is wearing
appropriate protective equipment. The workers who have worked
at Ground Zero were on a mission to save their brothers and sisters
in one of our nation's most horrible tragedies. These workers
were heroes. But like workers who rush into confined spaces to
save their brothers or sisters and are overpowered by toxic substanceswe
hope that they do not become martyrs 6 months, next year
or 10 years from now.
Of the many lessons learned we
need to reiterate the dynamic that public health and worker safety
are based upon stringent government standards, strong enforcement,
and an educated, informed, active, organized workforce and public.
We need to go back to basics.

Infectious
Diseases
Union Advocates Call for
Safeguards As CDC Readies Smallpox Vaccine Plan
By John Herzfeld
Occupational Safety and Health Reporter
November 28, 2002
NEW YORK--With the announcement of a Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention plan for voluntary smallpox vaccinations expected
imminently, two union safety and health directors Nov. 25 called
for safeguards to ensure that the anti-bioterrorism effort does
not bring more harm than good to health care and emergency response
workers.
Speaking at a forum on smallpox
sponsored by the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and
Health, safety advocates Bill Borwegen of the Service Employees
International Union and James August of the American Federation
of State, County, and Municipal Employees argued that many unanswered
questions must be addressed before the vaccination plan moves
forward.
CDC announced in early October
that it intends to launch a preventive vaccination program, prior
to any reports of a smallpox incident, for some 500,000 health
care workers, to be expanded in later waves to 10 million emergency
response workers and then the general U.S. public (32 OSHR 997,
10/24/02).
Borwegen said that he had been
told at a meeting with federal health officials that the final
CDC plan could be announced as early as the first week in December.
Stephanie Factor, a CDC medical epidemiologist assigned to the
New York City Department of Health who also appeared at the event,
said that she had heard that the plan was being reviewed by officials
at the Department of Health and Human Services and the White
House and that an HHS announcement on the final shape of the
policy was expected "any time."
Worker Protections Needed
Borwegen maintained that the
plan would be incomplete without adequate worker protections.
"We need to ensure that our members are protected in this
process," he said. "A lot of I's need to be dotted
and T's need to be crossed, and we hope they will be when the
final plan comes out." August similarly warned that tough
unresolved economic and political issues come along with the
vaccination plan, adding, "We need to think these things
through together and ask these questions now, before it's too
late."
Among the issues raised by the
union officials were:
- education and training to ensure
that workers understand the nature of the smallpox risk and the
risks of the vaccine itself;
- screening for conditions for
which the vaccine is counterindicated, including HIV, chemotherapy
treatment and other sources of immune deficiency, pregnancy,
history of eczema, or any active skin rash;
- discrimination against workers
who decline the vaccine and may thus face job transfers with
accompanying seniority and pay issues;
- compensation for lost time and
medical expenses for workers made ill by the vaccine or quarantined
because of the risk of contagion;
- the role of the workers' compensation
system for vaccine-related illness or death; and
- the cost of the effort and other
resource-allocation issues.
"If health care workers
are going to be the foot soldiers in the war on terrorism, how
are they going to be protected?" Borwegen asked. "We
need a safety net to be provided, either by the employer or by
the federal, state, or local government."
Unsafe Needles
The union officials also protested
against what they said was a CDC purchase of millions of the
bifurcated needles used for smallpox vaccine without insisting
on obtaining a needle type equipped with integrated safety features,
which is available. Borwegen said that CDC was "flouting"
the Needlestick Prevention and Safety Act of 2000 with the purchase.
The officials also argued that
protections against smallpox transmission could be built into
health care facilities as part of a general airborne pathogens
standard similar to the unreleased Occupational Safety and Health
Administration tuberculosis standard they said was set to be
"killed" by the Bush administration. "If we had
a TB standard in place, we would already be miles down the road
for preventive measures other than vaccination," August
said.
Suggesting that more information
is needed to assess the relative risk of a smallpox outbreak,
August said it was hard to judge what the proper response should
be to a "theoretical" threat. Borwegen questioned the
launching of protections against such exotic threats as smallpox,
plague, or anthrax "when we're not doing what we can"
to counter the larger existing threat of TB.
Calling for more efforts at discussion
and education with workers and the public, August said that AFSCME
members "are the folks on the front lines of every disaster,
and they know what can happen to the best-laid plans." He
added, "The key is informed consent, with the emphasis on
informed."
Impositions From Both Sides
Faced with the criticisms at
the meeting, Joseph R. Masci, director of medicine at Mount Sinai
Services/Elmhurst Hospital, acknowledged that many issues had
yet to be worked out. "This is being imposed on us as it's
being imposed on you," he said. In his general remarks,
he laid out the medical background on smallpox, underscoring
its potency but seeking to balance those dangers with the absence
of risk from casual contact and the relative effectiveness of
available defenses.
Factor, who gave a presentation
on preliminary versions of the CDC plan, sought to assure union
safety and health professionals that confidentiality, discrimination,
compensation, and other issues could be resolved. "Our role
is to give people as much information as possible to make an
informed decision," she said during a question-and-answer
session. "We hope this is part of a continuing dialogue.
Nobody will agree to go forward with this unless these issues
are worked out."
Copyright © 2002 by The
Bureau of National Affairs, Inc., Washington D.C.

One
Year Later, 9/11 Health Concerns Linger
By Barbara McKenna
AFT On Campus
October 18, 2002
http://www.aft.org/higher_ed/Health_Concerns.html
The effects of Sept. 11 will
remain forever in the minds and hearts of Americans. But for
many New Yorkers, the disaster continues to pose daily physical
and psychological challenges as well. No one knows this better
than the people who live and work in the community near Ground
Zero--including members of the Professional Staff Congress/AFT
who work at the Borough of Manhattan Community College. Last
September, the 17,000-student institution lost a large classroom
building--Fiterman Hall--located next to the World Trade Center.
The PSC received many inquiries
from members who were worried about their health in the days
following the terrorist attacks. A full year later, questions
remain about the long-term effects of exposures to toxins in
the aftermath of the incident.
The PSC is concerned about elevated
lead levels in the air-handling units and the deadly mix of asbestos,
dioxin and mold, says Joan Greenbaum, a health and safety officer
for the union. PSC has yet to be given an exact date for toxic
waste clean-up, Greenbaum adds.
A more visible problem is overcrowded
classrooms. When the community college's 17,000 students returned
to campus last month, they were crammed into the main campus
building, which was designed to hold only 8,000 students. "The
air is terrible," says Jane Young, president of the PSC
chapter at BMCC. "Many of the [temporary] classrooms don't
have windows. Every day, there are escalators that don't work.
We have lots of quality-of-life issues."
The administration brought in
portable classrooms, but they were located too close to the trucks
and barges used during the clean-up of the site; the noise and
dust kept students from using them, notes Greenbaum.
Fiterman Hall will be razed and
rebuilt, but it may take three to five years before the new building
is completed. In the meantime, the BMCC administration is looking
for rental space in the area to ease overcrowding.
Last year the PSC, with the cooperation
of the college administration, asked the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) to examine the extent
of the physical and mental health problems of college staff following
Sept 11. NIOSH surveyed the faculty and professional, clerical,
maintenance and security employees at the college. The agency's
report is pending.
In June, NIOSH released results
of a similar survey of faculty and staff conducted at Stuyvesant
High School, located several blocks from BMCC. A significant
number of Stuyvesant staff showed symptoms of depression and
posttraumatic stress disorder syndrome as well as other physical
symptoms.
The findings are important to
the PSC because "BMCC has used Stuyvesant as a barometer,"
Greenbaum says. The PSC has been following the lead of the high
school's parent association and its efforts because the BMCC
has all of the same health and safety issues as the school, she
adds.
The PSC also has been active
in the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health
(NYCOSH), a coalition of unions, environmental activists and
city residents. Earlier this year, NYCOSH experts testified on
behalf of its members about the impact of the attacks on public
health at hearings held by the City Council, the New York State
Department of Environmental Conservation and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
The successful effort to hold
hearings on the community health and safety issues that resulted
from the Sept. 11 attacks was a collaboration between labor and
city residents, notes Greenbaum. The parties came together because
"the residents were not getting anywhere by themselves,
and neither was labor," she says.
Copyright by the American Federation
of Teachers, AFLCIO

Congressman:
OSHA's 9/11 Response Endangered Workers
By James Nash
Occupational Hazards
September 30, 2002
In the face of mounting evidence
of long-term illness among those who did rescue and recovery
work at the former World Trade Center (WTC), the congressman
representing Lower Manhattan has criticized the response of OSHA
and EPA to last year's terrorist attacks.
In a June 3 letter to OSHA Administrator
John Henshaw, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-NY, requested detailed information
explaining why OSHA suspended its enforcement authority at the
WTC disaster site.
Henshaw's Aug. 9 reply appears
not to have resolved the issue. In addition, the OSHA administrator's
letter provoked new charges of EPA duplicity from Nadler's office.
Henshaw explained that "the
urgency of the task" at the WTC "did not allow time
to invoke OSHA's ordinary enforcement procedures to assure the
safety of these workers."
OSHA officials have defended
the decision not to enforce safety and health rules by noting
that contested citations can take years to settle, whereas the
partnership agreements used at Ground Zero led to immediate resolutions
of safety issues. They also point to the low injury rate at the
site as proof the emphasis on consultation and compliance assistance
worked.
"I am sure there is no suggestion
on your part," Henshaw wrote in his reply to Nadler, "that
the decision to place an emphasis on assistance somehow added
to the danger those heroic workers encountered."
That is precisely what Nadler
is suggesting, according to spokesperson Eric Schmeltzer.
"The Congressman's contention
is that there should have been enforcement," Schmeltzer
explained. "He believes the suspension of OSHA enforcement
authority in favor of the contractors did put America's heroes
in unnecessary danger."
Schmeltzer emphasized that Nadler
was placing no blame on the contractors, as they can only operate
with the information given them by the government. Recent studies
by Johns Hopkins University's School of Public Health, the Center
for Disease Control and other institutions have documented persistent
respiratory symptoms among rescue and recovery workers, many
of whom did not use proper respiratory equipment while working
at Ground Zero.
Jonathan Bennett, public affairs
director at the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and
Health said his organization was troubled by a number of features
of Henshaw's response to Nadler.
"The Nadler letter asks
for some very specific information, to document and explain why
OSHA suspended its enforcement authority," Bennett said.
"Henshaw didn't answer the question - what he wrote was
a bunch of generalities."
Nadler has been even more critical
of EPA's reaction to the terrorist attacks, specifically statements
that the air in Lower Manhattan was safe and EPA's refusal to
take charge of cleaning up the interior of Lower Manhattan buildings
contaminated with a variety of contaminants.
EPA has defended its decision
by arguing that it had no legal responsibility to clean up interior
environments because the National Contingency Plan (NCP) was
not in effect.
In his letter, Henshaw defended
OSHA's consultation role at the WTC be referring to OSHA's membership
in the NCP.
"OSHA is now saying NCP
is in effect, a point Rep. Nadler has been contending all along
in the face of EPA denials," said Schmeltzer.
EPA declined to respond to numerous
requests for comment on whether NCP was in effect.
by James L Nash (jnash@penton.com)

Ready
or Not, Disasters Happen
By Martha L. Orr, MN, RN, CAE
Online Journal of Issues in Nursing
September 30, 2002
http://www.nursingworld.org/ojin/topic19/tpc19_2.htm
ABSTRACT
The New York State Nurses Association was as was the entire
country plunged into disaster response mode by 9:30 am
on the morning of Tuesday, September 11, 2001. Although the association
had engaged in limited disaster planning prior to this event,
that planning was in terms of an internal disaster such as a
fire in our headquarters building. There was no plan for responding
to a community catastrophe of the magnitude being experienced.
The association faced unique challenges including the
fact that our New York City offices are located near ground zero
- but was fortunate in having expert resource persons on staff
and available to organize a response. Since September, the association
has applied the lessons learned from this experience and developed
a comprehensive disaster plan for the future. The purpose of
this article is to share those lessons learned with the community
of nursing associations in the hope that others can use the information
to build effective disaster plans of their own.
Key words: disaster, planning,
response
The tragic events of September
11, 2001 affected the entire nation and the world. To those of
us who live and work in New York, the shock of watching the World
Trade Centers skyscrapers collapse into millions of tons
of rubble and the fear of possibly 10,000 victims were initially
paralyzing. In the headquarters building of the New York State
Nurses Association (NYSNA) in upstate New York 150 miles
away, approximately 80 nurses many from the metropolitan
area - were gathered for a meeting. They and the staff of the
association congregated around our television sets and wept,
or sat at telephones urgently, and usually in vain, trying to
reach family and friends in the immediate area. Most telephone
service and electronic communications systems in lower Manhattan
were disrupted, and all intact communication lines were immediately
flooded with calls. The NYSNA offices on Wall Street, within
a few blocks of the World Trade Center, could not be reached,
so we had the additional stress of concern for the staffs
safety in that area.
It was initially feared that
as many as 10,000 persons might have lost their lives in the
disaster. However, through the heroic evacuation efforts of the
police, fire departments and thousands of employees, visitors,
and bystanders, fewer than 3000 individuals died in the tragedy.
The property and business damages have been estimated at over
100 billion dollars. Indirect costs related to the lost wages
and benefits of employees, and the continuing medical and mental
health treatment of survivors, their families, and others affected
by the disaster are incalculable.
The association had never contemplated
a disaster on this scale.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We were clearly not prepared to respond to a major community
disaster in which the health care system and nurses
would be a vital resource to be mobilized.
We had planned for fire or other natural disaster involving our
headquarters, but we were clearly not prepared to respond to
a major community disaster in which the health care system
and nurses would be a vital resource to be mobilized.
Although many nurses receive basic education in first aid, epidemiology
and outbreaks of infectious disease, and perhaps some facility-
based training on disaster plans related to fires, multiple vehicle
accidents or train/plane crases, few (if any) educational institutions
or health care facilities provide any courses or electives on
mass casualties or disasters of this scale.
As the professional association
for registered nurses in New York, the associations mission
includes services to members and the profession at large. We
have more than 150 staff in three offices, including experts
in communications, the regulation of practice in the state, and
information management. When the disaster occurred, senior NYSNA
staff were uncertain of what role the association could serve
in the recovery efforts. However, it seemed apparent that we
had the resources to assist in the disaster by being a channel
for information concerning the possible need for nurse volunteers.
Nurses across the United States, as well as within the state,
soon utilized our web site as a first point of information. Additional
disaster response continued throughout the course of the disaster
recovery efforts, thus showing the appropriate role of the association
in this situation. The purpose of this article is to share those
lessons learned, lessons about what professional associations
can do in response to such disasters, in the hope that other
associations can use this information to build effective disaster
plans of their own.
Immediate Responses
Within an hour of the disaster, executive staff of the association
organized an Emergency Response Team to assess the situation,
determine priorities, and organize our work. These activities
included arranging transportation; obtaining proof of licensure;
establishing communications; and managing volunteers, operations
and public relations.
Arrange Transportation
The most pressing requirement
was to arrange for transportation back to New York City for the
nurses attending our meeting in our headquarters in upstate New
York.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A complicating factor was that many of the members in the building
had no available documentation of their licensure status as RNs...
These nurses were experiencing a profound and urgent need to
return to New York City, both to check on the safety of their
families and to report to their places of employment in the City.
Public transportation had ceased and private transportation was
restricted from entering Manhattan. Since airlines were grounded,
several members had to rent automobiles to drive back to other
cities around the state. A complicating factor was that many
of the members in the building had no available documentation
of their licensure status as RNs or their employment in New York
City, both of which were required to arrange clearance by the
National Guard to travel into the affected area.
Initially, the State Police,
the Fire Department, the Red Cross, and the National Guard turned
down NYSNAs request to provide transportation back to New
York City for the stranded nurses. Ultimately, an official from
the States Emergency Medical Services Bureau commandeered
a bus and coordinated entry into the city. By this time the Borough
of Manhattan and all approaches to New York City had been "locked
down" and were under the control of local police, the military,
or National Guard.
Obtain Proof of Identity and
Professional Licensure
Members needed proof that they
were registered nurses to gain access into New York City. NYSNA
staff accessed the State Education Department Office of the Professions
licensure verification web site and printed a copy of each nurses
on-line licensure information. This proof of status, in conjunction
with photo identification, facilitated the successful return
of these nurses into New York City.
Establish Communications
The disruption of telephone,
fax, and computer communications into lower Manhattan was particularly
stressful. Fortunately, many staff and visitors present in our
headquarters had cell phones and were eventually able to make
connections to their families and employers in New York City.
NYSNA staff were evacuated from the New York City office, located
within blocks of "ground zero" and soon arranged a
network of cellular communications among themselves and with
our headquarters. Since the Executive level staff work at headquarters,
it was important to establish regular communication with the
New York City staff, most of whom work as field service representatives
in the health care facilities of the New York City area.
Communications with disaster
response agencies were very difficult since we did not have a
current list of contact numbers or staff names. These agencies
were inundated with their own requirements and we had to go through
"back channels" to establish contact. Our headquarters
staff who had working relationships with agency staff were able
to contact those persons instead of the agency officials, and
then to relay offers of assistance or ask urgent questions.
Manage volunteers
Within two hours of the disaster,
NYSNA headquarters (upstate) was overwhelmed with calls and e-mail
from nurses across the country who wanted to volunteer their
services. It was necessary to assign three full-time staff to
answer the telephones and e-mail and record the information.
Potential volunteers (over 1000 contacts) were eager to be called
on and wanted immediate and frequent follow-up telephone or e-mail
contact from NYSNA.
NYSNAs Emergency Response
Team contacted the State Emergency Management Office (SEMO),
and NYSNA was designated as the official repository for information
from nurses who could volunteer during the disaster. A system
was established to respond to telephone calls and e-mails, and
a database was created that included name, state of licensure,
address, contact numbers, e-mail address, specialty and availability.
This information was sent to
SEMO. In addition, NYSNA notified the Healthcare Association
of New York State, the Greater New York Hospital Association,
the New York Organization of Nurse Executives, and the nursing
executives in the New York City area that a searchable list of
over 1000 nurses and other healthcare workers was available.
This list was also shared with the American Red Cross. State
nurses associations and other groups offered to send busloads
of nurse volunteers. A medical center in Vermont sent a list
of all of their healthcare workers. All potential volunteers
were informed that the New York State Nurse Practice Act contains
an exemption for federal, state and civil emergencies. During
such emergencies, RNs need not be licensed in New York State,
but must bring with them evidence of current licensure in another
state.
Manage operations
Not the least of our concerns
was the fact that no business could be conducted from our New
York City office for two weeks. Mail delivery was completely
disrupted and when the office was reopened, there was an enormous
backlog of work for the administrative and professional staff.
Although the professional staff were able to establish contacts
working from home, in many cases field service staff could not
reach their facilities because of transportation disruption.
It was necessary to shift all possible activity to our headquarters.
Alternative office space had to be found in the event that the
city office could not be reopened.
The impact of the disaster on
staff was tremendous, especially among those who volunteered
at the disaster site or who were evacuated from the NYC office.
Nearly every staff person has experienced some form of post-traumatic
stress disorder. Our Employee Assistance Program provider could
not meet the need for service on this scale, so it was necessary
to find additional assistance among our members and staff. Peer
support meetings were organized and provided for staff for about
three months.
Manage information and public
relations
Many members, the press, and
others called for information about the disaster and NYSNAs
response. We had no communications plan for an event of this
magnitude that required near constant internal and external communications
with the press, agencies, members, and volunteers. Fortunately,
NYSNA has an experienced communications staff, and as quickly
as messages could be crafted, they were placed on our web site.
Broadcast e-mail was used to keep the board of directors, other
state nurses associations and ANA informed of our activities
and needs.
Continuing and Long-Range Issues
By Thursday, September 13th , the response to NYSNA and SEMO
was so overwhelming that the call for nurse volunteers had to
be withdrawn. It was clear there would be few survivors and that
the emphasis would be on recovery, not rescue.
NYSNA members helped treat thousands
of survivors who arrived at NYC hospitals. Many were admitted,
but most were triaged and treated for minor injuries. While the
initial onslaught of patients seemed overwhelming, hospitals
never lost their ability to deliver services, largely because
their own staffs instantly mobilized. Few facilities had to call
any staff persons to come in all off duty staff mobilized
themselves!
By Tuesday afternoon, September
18th, the focus shifted to helping rescue workers, as there were
no more survivors expected. NYSNA members helped at the staging
and family center areas, providing mental health counseling and
assistance with the shelters. NYSNA staff members contacted their
military reserve units, volunteered with the American Red Cross
at a World Trade Center triage center, assisted with the rescue
and recovery, provided emergency nursing care, donated blood,
and volunteered with the Red Crosss Family Services Division.
Our web site described how nurses
were responding to the terrorist attack and how to volunteer.
Information was also supplied about hotlines, grief-counseling
services, and suggested charities for donations. On a daily basis
the need for supplies or opportunities for volunteering were
identified. NYSNA shared stories from nurses providing care near
the World Trade Center and provided an online opportunity for
nurses to comment on the national crisis. Also on the web site
were recommendations from the New York Committee for Occupational
Safety and Health (NYCOSH) about air and environmental hazards
that might affect those involved in rescue, recovery and clean-up
operations.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The association utilized staff of our Statewide Peer Assistance
Network to provide individual and group opportunities to discuss
the feelings of grief and anger that were so prevalent.
For months following the disaster, the primary needs for nurses
were for specialists in mental health care (children and adults)
and burn care. NYSNA facilitated access to lists of qualified
providers in these areas. Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome was
evident in many volunteers and staff of the association. The
association utilized staff of our Statewide Peer Assistance Network
to provide individual and group opportunities to discuss the
feelings of grief and anger that were so prevalent. First-hand
accounts of conditions at "Ground Zero" were shared
by staff who volunteered at the site. Through our communications
department, the association also collected nurses stories
of their experience. Some of these stories were printed in a
special issue of The Journal of the New York State Nurses Association
(The Journal of NYSNA,2002).
One very special concern was
the fact that the Associations centennial convention and
celebration was scheduled in less than six weeks in a
New York City hotel.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
...the decision to proceed with the convention (and to deny terrorism
that acknowledgement) was quickly made.
Questions about our intent to hold the convention and
members willingness to attend surfaced almost immediately.
With enormous cancellation penalties looming, the decision to
proceed with the convention (and to deny terrorism that acknowledgement)
was quickly made. By action of our Voting Body at convention,
a special task force was created to examine our preparedness
to meet the disaster-related needs of our communities, especially
for provision of mental health care.
The Future Getting Ready
For Any Disaster
NYSNA held an "after-action" review of the entire experience
and formulated plans for future work. These were our goals:
Establish a comprehensive disaster
plan. The plan should, at a minimum, include internal policies
for responding to various levels of emergencies and disasters;
policies for interaction of the association with federal, state
and local authorities; alternate communications channels; evacuation
plans; plans for maintenance and restoration of business operations.
Develop guidelines for communication and information that should
be provided for members and the public through various communication
vehicles. Designate a specific spokesperson to respond to the
press.
Develop and maintain a master list of contact numbers and staff
names for SEMO, FEMA, American Red Cross (state and city offices),
Salvation Army, and mental health providers. Establish and develop
relationships with these resource persons. Update the list every
3-6 months.
Develop an understanding of the functions (and coordination)
of FEMA and SEMO, and relief agencies. (Some Directors of Nursing
told us that they were required to get nurses from FEMA in order
for the federal government to reimburse for the costs of these
nurses.) Determine the best way to integrate assistance from
the association into these other groups activities.
Address the educational needs of members regarding disaster preparedness,
training for volunteer work in disasters, bioterroism, and employee
rights when absent due to a federal, state, or local emergency.
Explore the possibility/advisability of establishing permanent
photo identification cards for health personnel.
Keep in mind that history is occurring during a disaster and
keep a record for historical purposes. First hand accounts of
nurses involvement in disaster relief should be invited
and recorded.
Understand that SNA staff are experiencing the disaster even
while having to respond. Plan for provision of staff support.
A "permanent" staff team was created to develop the
disaster plan and make recommendations for implementation activities.
The plan is nearing completion and includes sections on life
safety, property protection, staff communications, administration
and logistics, community outreach and disaster response, recovery
and restoration of operations, policies regarding interruption
of mail and telecommunications, and handling of suspicious mail.
Alternate office space has been
identified.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offsite storage of the associations critical databases
has been arranged, with electronic backup every evening.
Offsite storage of the associations critical databases
has been arranged, with electronic backup every evening. American
Red Cross pamphlets and checklists for personal/home disaster
preparation have been distributed to all staff. Primary and alternate
communications "trees" (including telephone, e-mail,
and cell phone numbers) have been developed and will be distributed
to all management staff.
NYSNA has received a grant from
the Department of Health to provide disaster preparedness training
for nurses. We hope to receive some additional funding to create
and maintain a statewide database of nurses who are trained and
ready to provide disaster related services. NYSNA has developed
and posted an on-line continuing education course on exposure
to biological agents (bioterrorism) and plans to offer additional
courses on disaster preparedness. (http://www.nysna.org/PROGRAMS/NED/HOME.htm)
Organized Nursings Response
NYSNA believes that a national, coordinated plan and mechanism
for mobilizing the professions large resource pool should
be developed. It is important to ensure the availability and
involvement of volunteer professional nurses for the emergency
organizations and agencies that respond to emergencies and disasters
such as earthquakes, hurricanes, fires, storms, tornadoes, epidemics,
nuclear reactor accidents, biological hazards, and acts of violence
and terrorism.
For this reason, NYSNA, in collaboration
with several other state nurses associations, submitted a resolution
to the 2002 House of Delegates of The American Nurses Association
(ANA) to urge ANA to provide ongoing leadership for the profession
on the need to develop and maintain an adequate number of nurse
volunteers available to the organizations and agencies that provide
emergency, rescue and disaster services. We believe ANA must
also provide direction to individual volunteer professional nurses
in order that these nurses may proactively plan their own responses
in a coordinated way that enhances the necessary relief and rescue
efforts.
The specific recommendations
submitted to ANA were as follows:
Provide leadership for the profession
on the need for nurses to volunteer their services to assist
in the activities of the agencies and organizations that offer
rescue, relief, and disaster services.
Promote workplace initiatives that support nurses volunteering
during periods of local, state, and federal emergencies and disasters.
Provide leadership for the constituent member associations in
planning for state, regional and national disaster services.
The resolution was passed nearly unanimously by the House of
Delegates in 2002.
Several state nurses associations
have already begun their own work in planning for disasters.
The Georgia Nurses Association, for example, in collaboration
with the American Red Cross, the Georgia Board of Nursing, the
Georgia Department of Human Resources, and the Georgia Nurses
Foundation, has established a network of volunteer nurses who
will make up part of a statewide emergency response team(Robinson,
2002). Work on disaster preparedness has also been done by the
Florida, Oklahoma. Virginia, and Washington Nurses Associations.
Clearly, professional associations
should be prepared to respond to even unimaginable disasters
- to mobilize resources, maintain their vital business operations,
facilitate communications, and support nurses in the exercise
of their professional responsibility. One excellent resource
to assist associations in planning is a special publication of
the Federal Emergency Management Agencys "Emergency
Management Guide for Business and Industry"(Wahle &
Beatty, n.d.). This publication contains sections on plan development
and suggestions for communications, community outreach, life
safety, and other business recovery information. The Guide is
available in both HTML and as a PDF file from the Preparedness,
Training and Exercises Room of the FEMA online library (www.fema.gov/library/).
Another excellent resource is
a special issue of a Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations (JCAHO) publication, "Emergency Management
in the New Millenium." (JCAHO, 2001). Although framed in
terms of emergency management within health care facilities,
several of the articles contain recommendations for emergency
management that are applicable to associations. Subscribers can
obtain this issue online at www.jcrinc.com/.
Summary
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nursings organizations have an opportunity and obligation,
as part of the professions social contract, to identify
our appropriate roles in the event of natural or manmade disasters.
Sadly, it appears that continued threats of terrorism and mass
destruction will be a presence in our society for the foreseeable
future. Nursings organizations have an opportunity and
obligation, as part of the professions social contract,
to identify our appropriate roles in the event of natural or
manmade disasters. It is a given that such disasters will be
disruptive of the normal systems needed to respond to large-scale
disasters, including communications, transportation, supply lines,
and decision-making systems. Strategic planning must be utilized
to identify alternate scenarios for response. Finally, the impact
of disasters upon the emergency response personnel and their
families must be understood and provision made to care for the
caregivers. Ready or not, disasters happen. Registered nurses
and their professional organizations can be leaders
in recovery efforts.
AUTHORS
Martha L. Orr, MN, RN, CAE
e-mail: martha.orr@nysna.org
Martha Orr received both her
bachelor and masters of nursing degrees from Emory University
in Atlanta, GA. She is certified by the American Society of Association
Executives (Certified Association Executive). Ms. Orr has been
Executive Director of NYSNA for 17 years. NYSNA is the oldest
and largest of the ANA constituent member associations. With
a staff of more than 160 persons located in three offices, Ms.
Orr has had numerous experiences managing organizational crises,
though none involving a community disaster of these proportions.
When asked to comment on experiences that might have assisted
her in responding, Ms. Orr credits her training in nursing assessment,
care planning, and evaluation. Multi-tasking skills are highly
developed in professional nurses and association executives!
REFERENCES
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations.
(2001). Mobilizing Americas health care reservoir. Perspectives,
21, 12.
The Journal of the New York State
Nurses Association. (2002). The New York city disaster [Special
Issue]. The Journal of the New York State Nurses Association,
33,1.
Robinson, C.C. (2002). Introducing
the Georgia nurse alert system. Georgia Nursing, 62 (1), 1,3.
Wahle, T.& Beatty, G. (n.d.).
Emergency management guide for business and industry. Jessup,
MD: Federal Emergency Management Agency.
© 2002 Online Journal of
Issues in Nursing

Dusting off Manhattan: A year after 9/11, worries
about toxic dust plague residents
By Francesca Lyman
MSNBC
September 9, 2002
http://www.msnbc.com/news/803400.asp
Sept. 9 A year since the
twin towers collapsed, spewing a million tons of dust and ash
over the city and triggering long-smoldering fires, New Yorkers
say they're finally breathing cleaner air. Even so, as schools
reopen and the city continues testing and cleaning thousands
of apartments for lingering dust, residents are voicing unsettling
health concerns about the fallout from the city's worst environmental
disaster.
On the morning of Sept. 11, just
after the first jetliner hit, actress Kim Todd got a call from
a friend who worked in the World Trade Center asking for help
evacuating people. Living just two blocks away, Todd rushed to
his aid. But she was caught in thick smoke and the throngs of
people escaping the building, and narrowly missed being hit by
a falling piece of the jetliner.
"Then the second tower came
down, and everyone around me was dead. And while I was taking
a breath and thinking, I'm OK don't move,' a passing
fireman stopped and, seeing me alive, slapped me across the face
and said, Run! Run for your life!'"
After intensive therapy and an
easing of her "survivor's guilt," the loyal resident
of lower Manhattan, an acting coach, is beginning to recover
psychologically. Now she worries about her physical ailments.
She still suffers from a chronic cough and headaches, like many
of her neighbors who inhaled the dust and fumes of downtown Manhattan
over the course of the past year. "But I am happy to be
alive, and my doctors have helped tremendously, even with my
bills," Todd says.
Today most New Yorkers, including
clean-air advocates, say New York's air quality is back to normal
"at least normal for New York," says Louise
Leavitt of the American Lung Association's state chapter.
But some anxieties remain. Downtown
residents who were promised help in getting rid of lingering
ash and dust that made its way indoors through windows, vents
and ducts worry that the testing and cleanup may not be enough.
Fire trucks and cars still turn up with asbestos-tainted dust.
ONGOING CLEANUP EFFORTS
In May, the Environmental Protection
Agency announced it would clean up and test the apartments of
any downtown residents who wanted it. So far, the agency has
received more than 3,100 requests for for cleaning and 900 for
testing only.
The EPA hopes its efforts will
allay any lingering health concerns. "We're talking about
very low, long-term health risks here," says Bonnie Bellow,
an EPA spokeswoman, "but there's no question that some people
are more sensitive than others and that residues of asbestos
could be problematic."
Many residents have been mistrustful
of health officials because they feel they didn't warn them enough
of potential hazards early on or take necessary steps to protect
them from dust mixed with hazardous materials such as asbestos
and heavy metals.
The agency was widely criticized
after EPA chief Christie Whitman told New Yorkers that there
was nothing in the air to worry about in the weeks after the
attacks.
In June, a poll by an independent
health research group found that more than half of lower Manhattan
residents reported some sort of ailment. "In an interesting
twist," wrote the Mellman Group, "the Manhattanites
expressed more concern about air quality than they did about
another terrorist attack."
"We all have been exposed
to a host of toxic chemicals," says Todd, adding that tests
of dust in her apartment turned up everything from asbestos to
mercury to kaolin, a clay that causes skin irritation.
Many residents worry about what
was in the dust they breathed or still breathe. Jared Cook, president
of a tenants group for one of Battery Park City's buildings,
two blocks south of Ground Zero, says many tenants wish the EPA
would test indoor spaces for other contaminants besides asbestos,
since mercury, lead and other heavy metals, PCBs and dioxins
have turned up in independent tests.
Rather than protest, however,
Cook says his group advocates that tenants take advantage of
what the EPA is now offering. "We hope that letting EPA
send in its certified contractors to test and clean for asbestos
will most likely take care of most other contaminants as well,"
says Cook. Nevertheless he finds it unsettling that of the five
or six residents who had themselves tested for exposure to heavy
metals, all tested positive.
Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.,
an outspoken critic of the EPA's handling of the situation, puts
it more strongly. "One year later, it's outrageous that
people are still living in contaminated spaces," says the
congressman. "People are still anguishing over the known
hazards and possible hazards of what they're breathing in their
homes."
Other critics say the EPA ought
to be protecting workplaces as well. "There are thousands
of offices and stores where asbestos-tainted dust fell and where
cleanups were insufficient," says Jonathan Bennett of the
New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health. "It
still lingers in boiler rooms, crevices and carpets."
CONCERNS ABOUT NEARBY SCHOOL
Then there are worries over Stuyvesant High School, the center
of a heated controversy since last June, when its ductwork and
ventilation system were found to be contaminated with lead. The
school, which sits across from a site where toxic debris was
loaded onto a garbage barge, also served as a triage center for
Ground Zero rescue workers.
The New York City Department
of Education assured parents that the school was thoroughly cleaned
when it reopened last week, and Parents Association President
Judy Moore is satisfied with the department's standards. "It's
better that they should get back to their old school than worry
about possible hazards," she says. "Any problematic
areas could be sealed off and cleaned while school is in session."
But on opening day, several dozen
parents stood outside protesting the school's handling of the
issue. Paul Edwards, parent of a 17-year-old Stuyvesant student,
wasn't planning on sending his son back until the school could
answer his lingering safety questions. He and others worried
that vents had not been retested and that carpeting and upholstery
were still contaminated with asbestos. As a result of their protest,
however, Edwards was happy that the department "agreed to
remove and replace all carpeting in the building, replace the
theatrical curtain in the auditorium and continue discussions."
Despite the concerns, many residents
say they wouldn't want to leave downtown. "I just want to
get through the anniversary, and find the fireman that saved
my life," says Todd.
Francesca Lyman is a Seattle area-based freelance writer.
MSNBC © 2002

The
Air Down There
A year after the attacks,
concerns linger over the long-term health effects on residents
and rescue workers who breathed in contaminated air
By Julie Scelfo and Suzanne Smalley
NEWSWEEK WEB EXCLUSIVE
September 6, 2002
http://www.msnbc.com/news/802911.asp#BODY
One Year Later When the World Trade Center exploded in
a cloud of dust and fire last year, LaVerna Bradley, 71, watched
in horror from her apartment on Madison Street, just ten blocks
away. But within minutes, shealong with her husband, Arthur,
who suffers from Parkinson's disease and has difficulty walkingwere
unable to see much of anything. A cloud of thick, gray dust blew
through their open windows before Arthur was able to close them.
LaVerna, who was bedridden after having minor surgery the day
before, was too weak to get up or prevent the contaminated dust
from overtaking the apartment. A fine powder quickly coated everything
in their home, including the kitchen counter, the velvet sofa,
and the bed the couple had bought when they got married in 1984.
"It was like being in England during the blitz," says
LaVerna. "Everything was confused."
A YEAR AFTER THE September 11 attack on New York, the Ground
Zero clean-up is officially over. But the health impact on workers
at the site and on lower Manhattan residents remains largely
unknown. Tens of thousands of people live in the surrounding
area. Thousands of others spent months working at the recovery
site, often directly atop the smoky ruins. In the days following
the attacks, the Environmental Protection Agency's Christie Whitman
proclaimed that there was no reason to worry. "[T]he public
in these areas is not being exposed to excessive levels of asbestos
or other harmful substances," Whitman said in a September
18 press release. New Yorkers "need not be concerned about
environmental issues as they return to their homes and workplaces,"
she added three days later.
But as information about toxins
in the dust began to make headline news, critics questioned whether
Whitman had spoken too quickly. Tests soon revealed, among other
findings, that some of the downtown dust samples contained significant
amounts of asbestos. Federal law requires that materials containing
more than one percent asbestos must be cleaned and disposed of
by professionally licensed workers wearing proper masks. Yet
many of the rescue workers spent days or weeks at the disaster
site with nothing covering their faces.
Residents who remained in lower
Manhattan also resumed life without masks, choosing to believe
the government's assurances. The EPA says it has no regulations
or standards regarding indoor air quality and deferred decisions
about cleaning indoor spaces to New York City. The city, in turn,
delegated those cleaning duties to tenants and building owners
who could decide for themselves how much, or even whether, to
clean. While some residents hired professionals, others like
the Bradleys couldn't afford the costly effort and instead cleaned
sporadically cleaned using mops or vacuums in the months following
the attacks. "You can't sweep this stuff," says the
grandmother of 17. "It's hidden in corners and underneath
furniture. I had to buy a cover for the couch because every time
my grandkids sit down a light dust rises up."
Meanwhile, hundreds of the firefighters
and other rescue workers began having respiratory problems. Bobby
Stanlewicz, who had rushed to Ground Zero after the Towers collapsed
on September 11, spent days fighting the fires that still spewed
from beneath the wreckage and helping his coworkers search for
signs of lifeoften working 16-hour shifts, even though
the smoke was irritating his throat and lungs. It wasn't until
weeks after he'd stopped working at the site that the 13-year
veteran firefighter began to notice a tightness in his chest.
"I had a couple of nights where I couldn't breathe at all,"
says Stanlewicz, 35. "I felt like I was suffocating."
Within six months of the tragedy,
an estimated 332 of the 10,000 firefighters who reported to the
site, including Stanlewicz, required medical leave of one month
or longer. Even some who did not take medical leave still complain
about shortness of breath, persistent coughs and tightness in
the chest. "It is very probable that some proportion of
the firefighters who worked at Ground Zero have sustained permanent
damage to their lungs," says Dr. Jaime Szeinuk, a doctor
who works at Mt. Sinai Hospital's occupational and environmental
health clinic. "Some of them may not have sustained permanent
damage, but if they continue to work as firefighters and become
exposed to more smoke, their condition will be aggravated. For
some of these men, the damage could be career ending."
As news of the firefighters'
heath problems spread, lower Manhattan residents who believed
they might still be living in contaminated apartments began demanding
more tests of the dust in their homes and workplaces. Other groups
formed to challenge authorities to do a better job cleaning up
the lower Manhattan schools. Jenna Orkin, who has become an environmental
activist in the wake of the September 11 attacks, pulled her
17-year-old son out of Stuyvesant High School in February. He
didn't speak to her for months but began to cheerlead her efforts
when independent test results became available two weeks ago
showing alarming asbestos levels throughout the school. In the
auditorium, asbestos levels were 250 times the safety limit,
according to independent tests performed by Howard Bader, an
environmental engineer hired by a parents' association. Yet Stuyvesant
High School waited until July to clean its ventilation system,
after assuring parents that it had been cleaned in October, Orkin
says.
The New York City board of education
says testing was done in October, though spokesman Tom Antonen
concedes that it consisted mainly of blowing air through the
vents. The decision to clean out the vents with soap and water
this summer came after low levels of lead were found in the system.
Still, Antonen says that the board has spent $1.7 million so
far on cleaning and testing at Stuyvesant High School. "There
have literally been thousands of air quality tests done and all
of them have come back normal," he adds.
Orkin remains skeptical. "The
testing done during the school year was grossly inadequate,"
she says. "I think the consequences of this are going to
be vast and I worry about increased cancer rates and birth defects."
Concerns like these reached a
fever pitch this summer. Although most lower-Manhattan residents
don't think they had the same level of exposure as the firefighters
who worked directly on the pile of rubble, they are worried about
the long-term implications of breathing the fine, particular
dust. Under increasing pressure from local residents and officials,
the federal government finally stepped in. On May 8, the EPA
announced it would provide clean-up and testing to any downtown
residents who wanted it. In August, the EPA announced that it
would extend the deadline for registration by a month, until
October 2, but the news never reached some families like the
Bradleys, who, despite multiple calls to FEMA, never heard about
the EPA's offer to clean. At press time, only 3,185 residents
had requested cleaning and testing, with another 902 asking for
testing alone.
The EPA and some experts say
most of those tests should yield normal (or near normal) results.
In fact, the EPA has maintained all along that the test results
conducted so far have not shown dangerous levels of contaminants
and that the heightened concern among downtown residents over
pollution problems has more to do with fear of the unknown than
with specific scientific data. "We're on the cutting edge
of science here. There's not a textbook that we could pull off
a shelf that says This is what you do when huge buildings
collapse'," says Mary Mears, a spokeswoman for the EPA's
office in New York. "I recognize that we do have our critics
right now, but, sadly, I'm afraid that all of the good work we
have done has gone unnoticed." The EPA began testing outdoor
air in lower Manhattan immediately after the tragedy, and didn't
stop until the week after recovery work officially ended at the
site in June. The agency also sent a dozen trucks to vacuum dust
from the street and erected a 31,000-square-foot cleaning station
to prevent workers from carrying the dust outside the World Trade
Center area.
Still, many health and safety
advocates insist that the EPA has been minimizing the risks of
air pollution in the area. "From our perspective...we're
coming up on the anniversary date and the EPA is just now seriously
addressing residents' problems," says Carrie Loewenherz,
a certified industrial hygienist with the New York Committee
for Occupational Safety and Health. "And the EPA is still
not acknowledging that there's a health risk problem, even though
there are documented cases of asthma, bronchitis and other respiratory
disease." The New York City Department of Health is making
plans to register 200,000 people for a longitudinal study to
monitor unusual symptoms among people who were heavily impacted
by the debris. "No one can say with absolute certainty until
time has passed whether there will be any longer term health
impacts than the ones that we saw in the immediate aftermath,"
says Sandra Mullin, a spokesperson for the New York City Department
of Health. "It's something we can't know and won't know
until over time."
While downtown residents and
firefighters are encouraged by the federal government's recent
agreement to help with clean-up and testing, many grumble that
it's too little, too late. ""The damage has been done
to my throat," says LaVerna Bradley, who began to cry as
she described how she has been unable to swallow and has trouble
breathing. "I know it's related to the dust that remains
in my apartment," she adds. "I've never had problems
like this before."
Though firefighters have finished
their work at Ground Zero, they also remain at risk. Scores of
firefighters found out in July that they'd been driving contaminated
trucks all year. The non-profit New York Environmental Law and
Justice Project (NYELJP) conducted independent tests of debris
taken from some fire trucks still in service after September
11. The results showed asbestos levels of 5 percent in the debris
found inside at least one truck, five times the widely recognized
threshold for material that civilians can safely handle. Several
other trucks tested by NYELJP also showed elevated asbestos rates.
Philip McArdle, the health and safety director of the Uniformed
Firefighters Association, said he is saddened by the way the
government has forgotten the men it once heralded as heroes.
"We did a very good job of taking care of the dead after
September 11," he said. "But we're doing a very bad
job of taking care of the living." Hopefully, it's not too
late to take care of both.
This page last updated
on August 21, 2003.
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