Gov.
Blagojevich announces Illinois preparedness team receives national
honors
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State's
Strategic National Stockpile team to demonstrate coordinated
statewide effort that is lauded as national model
[February 21, 2007]
SPRINGFIELD -- Governor Rod R.
Blagojevich announced that the Illinois Strategic National Stockpile
team will speak Thursday at the Local, State and Federal Public
Health Preparedness Summit in Washington, D.C. Illinois' SNS team,
selected from more than 300 submissions from public health officials
nationwide, will provide insight on the state's coordinated
preparedness efforts in a presentation entitled "The Amazing SNS
Race: Collaboration Between State Agencies to Get to the Finish."
Illinois was selected to highlight its efforts because the state has
achieved the highest ranking the past three years for its plan to
use local health departments to dispense medications and supplies.
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"We've made great strides to make sure our state is prepared for an
emergency. Now, other states will have the opportunity to learn from
our model to keep people safe," said Gov. Blagojevich. The
Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) consists of large quantities of
medications and medical supplies to protect people if there is a
public health emergency (terrorist attack, flu outbreak, earthquake,
etc.) severe enough to cause local and state supplies to run out.
Once federal, state and local authorities agree the stockpile is
needed, medications and medical supplies will be delivered to any
state in the U.S. within 12 hours. Each state has plans to receive
and distribute medications and medical supplies to local communities
as quickly as possible. The Illinois SNS team presentation will
illustrate the necessity of cooperation between state agencies in
the planning and implementation of the SNS, as has been rehearsed in
prior emergency response exercises, including the 2006 FLUEX
exercise.
During "The Amazing SNS Race: Collaboration Between State
Agencies to Get to the Finish" presentation, representatives from
six Illinois agencies (Illinois Emergency Management Agency,
Illinois State Police, Illinois National Guard, Illinois Department
of Transportation, Illinois Department of Corrections, Illinois
Department of Public Health) will each outline their part in the
plan and explain how their role in the State Emergency Operations
Center has helped develop the Illinois team. Illinois' model of
using local health departments to dispense medications and provide
vaccinations has become a trademark and a highly valued component of
the Illinois' nationally respected program.
The Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) manages the
coordination of assets for the stockpile's distribution and
delivery. IEMA works with the Illinois State Police to handle
security, the Illinois National Guard for warehouse manpower, the
Illinois Department of Transportation for both ground and air
transportation services, the Illinois Department of Corrections to
assist with facility availability, and the Illinois Department of
Public Health to handle product allocation quality control
procedures.
"An effective SNS program takes a tremendous amount of
coordination between state agencies, but also between the state and
local level," said Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr.
Eric E. Whitaker. "On the local level, we have trained with and
depend heavily on coordination with local health departments and
hospitals for the dispensing of SNS supplies. This coordination at
the state and local levels is what makes the Illinois SNS Program so
successful."
The 2007 Local, State and Federal Public Health Preparedness
Summit, which runs from February 19th-23rd, is designed to provide
cutting-edge presentations, continuing education opportunities and
offer information sharing from the field. Presentations, like the
one the Illinois team will deliver, are critical to the Summit's
relevance for participants and are the core of the educational
program.
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Gov. Blagojevich has led the charge for state preparedness
through various actions and exercises including:
The Illinois Department of Public Health, working
in cooperation with local health departments, conducted
full-scale SNS distribution and dispensing exercises in every
Illinois health jurisdiction by April 1, 2006. The dispensing
exercises assured that all residents of the county, and
therefore the state, will receive the needed medications.
Green Rating:
In 2003 Illinois became only the second state to obtain the
Green, or highest rating, for its SNS Program. Illinois has not
only maintained its Green rating for the past three years, but
has also remained one of only seven states to have the highest
rating for its SNS Program.
Tabletop
Exercises: The Illinois Department of Public Health
conducted three tabletop exercises on pandemic influenza in
2006, designed to document specific action steps and resources
needed to improve preparedness efforts in the state. Several
state agencies, including the Illinois Department of
Agriculture, the Illinois Emergency Management Agency and the
Illinois State Board of Education, participated in the tabletop
exercises along with local health departments, hospitals and
other health care organizations.
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FLUEX 2006: An
ambitious three-day exercise held in May 2006 tested the state's
preparedness for handling a major health crisis and simultaneous
terrorist attacks to help improve emergency planning and
preparedness in Illinois. More than 50 representatives from
state and federal agencies and the American Red Cross reported
to the State Incident Response Center (SIRC) within the State
Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) in Springfield to participate
in the exercise.
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Prairie Thunder
Exercise: The state conducted a major five-day emergency
response exercise in the Metro East area to test the state's
ability to respond to large-scale emergencies, which included a
mass evacuation and sheltering component. The exercise brought
federal, state and local response organizations together in a
coordinated response to multiple emergency scenarios that
included intelligence gathering and response to simulated
terrorist attacks, distribution of materials from the Strategic
National Stockpile, victim search and rescue efforts, and
establishment of a field hospital for treating "victims."
[Text copied from file received from
the
Illinois Office of
Communication and Information]
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