The following is an editorial submitted by Dr. Jonathan M. Metsch, a health educator and the former CEO of Jersey City Medical Center who is also a Hoboken resident
Medical experts do not know if, or where, or how much, or on what trajectory the Zika virus may spread across the United States. Nor do they know how else Zika might spread besides by certain types of mosquitos and by some types of sexual activity. However, the risks to pregnant women are well documented.
In fact, on Tuesday, a Honduran woman with the Zika virus gave birth at Hackensack University Medical Center to a baby girl with birth defects, and one of her doctors said they appear to be caused by the mosquito-borne virus, according to a story in the New York Times.
Of the more than 500 Zika cases so far in the U.S., all involved people infected in outbreak areas in South America, Central America, or the Caribbean, or people who had sex with infected travelers, the Times reported. The story noted that mosquitoes aren’t yet spreading Zika in the continental U.S., but experts predict small outbreaks are possible as mosquito season heats up.
Yes, it’s true that Zika is different from Ebola. But there are lessons to be learned from the 2014 Ebola scare relevant to planning for Zika. For example, Zika should not be considered treatable at any or every hospital.
According to the federal Center for Disease Control (CDC), “There is no vaccine to prevent or medicine to treat (the) Zika virus.”
One might argue that any hospital can take care of a Zika patient. But since there is no treatment, there’s an elevated risk for microcephaly – a birth defect that leaves babies with malformed heads and brains – and serious possible sequela such as Guillain–Barré syndrome, and since we cannot predict the trajectory or volume of a Zika surge, patients should initially be aggregated to develop evidenced-based care protocols.
The federal government should immediately develop guidelines for Zika regional referral centers (ZRRC)s, followed quickly by the designation of ZRRCs.
If there is no surge as mosquito season spreads across the county and if the severity of index cases is minimal, where to admit Zika patients can be reconsidered. But it would be better to start with robust, focused preparation and adapt to the situation as it actually emerges.
Meeting the virus head-on
In 2014, I suggested several anchor principles for Ebola preparedness in New Jersey, as hospitals of all sizes and scope “marketed” their Ebola readiness, only to learn that it took well over 20/ 25 full time staff to care for one Ebola patient (and 50 in Dallas!).
These recommendations included that every hospital that certified its Emergency Room as ready for Ebola be subject to at least three separate drills using a standardized form, and then be subject to random “secret shopper” inspections; that anyone with a confirmed or suspected Ebola diagnosis be immediately transferred to a regional center hospital designated by national standardized criteria which could demonstrate that it has sufficient nursing staff “volunteers” to care for a least five patients round the clock; and that isolation hospitals be readied for instant activation, whether a closed hospital prepared for Ebola now and standing by, or a “virtual” hospital ready-to-go in military fashion.
Also there was a need to minimize Ebola patients walking into an ER unannounced, and suggested a statewide 800 number be established so patients can call ahead and be transported by a prepared ambulance team and taken to a regional center.
Similar organizing principles are urgently need to be established for tiered Zika hospital preparedness. Here are some thoughts.
1. There should not be an automatic default to just designating Ebola Centers as ZRRCs, although there is likely to be significant overlap.
2. Zika Centers should be academic medical centers with respected, comprehensive infectious disease diagnostic/ treatment and research capabilities, and rigorous infection control programs. They should also offer robust, comprehensive perinatology, neonatology, and pediatric neurology services, with the most sophisticated imaging capabilities (and Zika-related “reading” expertise).
3. National leadership in clinical trials.
4. A track record of successful, large scale clinical Rapid Response.
5. Organizational wherewithal to address intensive resource absorption.
6. Start preliminary planning for Zika care out of the initial designated ZRRCs.
Zika protocols will be templates for are other mosquito borne diseases lurking on the horizon, such as Chikungunya, MERS, and Dengue.
– Jonathan M. Metsch, Dr.P.H.
Clinical Professor, Preventive Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
4776 Comments
Janis
I love your blog.. very nice colors & theme. Did you design this
website yourself or did you hire someone to do
it for you? Plz respond as I’m looking to construct my own blog and
would like to find out where u got this from. kudos
down weight
Do you have a spam problem on this blog; I also am a blogger, and I was curious about your situation; we have developed some nice procedures and we are looking to swap techniques with others, be sure to shoot me an email if interested.
Kermit
Hey! I know this is somewhat off topic but I was wondering which blog platform are you using for this
website? I’m getting sick and tired of WordPress because I’ve had issues with
hackers and I’m looking at alternatives for
another platform. I would be awesome if you could point me in the direction of a good platform.
http://forum.matrint.ru
We’re extra like an xtension of your team, or a advertising annd
markefing team for rernt aand lss lik a ‘Mad Men’ agency.
Kathie
If hemorrhaging continues for more than a couple of mins, simply sharp your animal medical
practitioner, that can easily inspect your pet dog
for thickening conditions.
Jared
Remarkable! Its in fact remarkable paragraph, I have got much
clear idea about from this paragraph.
Don
These SkinMedica® products are not intended to be medication products that diagnose,
treat, treatment, or prevent any disease or even condition.
Corazon
Hi there, I discovered your blog by means of
Google even as looking for a similar matter, your website came
up, it appears great. I have bookmarked it in my google bookmarks.
Hi there, simply become alert to your blog via Google, and
located that it’s truly informative. I am going to be careful
for brussels. I’ll appreciate in the event you continue this in future.
A lot of other people will be benefited from your writing.
Cheers!
Troy
Article writing is also a excitement, if you be familiar with after that you can write otherwise it is complex to write.
garcinia cambogia for weight loss
I’m impressed, I must say. Seldom do I encounter a blog that’s equally
educative and engaging, and let me tell you, you have hit
the nail on the head. The issue is an issue that too few men and women are speaking intelligently about.
I am very happy I came across this in my hunt for something relating to
this.