Homeland
Security botched pandemic preparedness : U.S. report
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[September 09, 2014]
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - The Department of Homeland Security failed to assess the
supplies it needed to deal with a potential pandemic and now has expired
stockpiles including medications, 200,000 respirators and 4,184 bottles
of hand sanitizers, an inspector general report showed.
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The department bought 16 million surgical masks and 350,000 white
coverall suits without establishing the need for them, according to
its inspector general's report, which included photographs of stacks
of unopened boxes piled high in a storeroom.
Eighty-one percent of DHS' supply of 296,000 doses of antiviral
medication, called medical countermeasures, will expire next year,
according to the report completed in late August and released on
Monday.
DHS also did not keep track of its supplies or where they were kept.
"As a result, the department has no assurance it has sufficient
personal protective equipment and antiviral medical countermeasures
for a pandemic response," it concluded.
The report comes as the United States prepares to help African
countries devastated by the rapid spread of the Ebola virus and work
to keep it from spreading to its shores.
The inspector general said DHS spent $47 million Congress
appropriated in 2006 for a potential pandemic on the preparedness
equipment, medication, research and exercises.
The Transportation Security Administration's stock of pandemic
preparedness equipment includes 200,000 respirators that are past
the five-year manufacturer’s guaranteed usability, the report said.
The inspector general said 84 percent of the department's 4,982
bottles of hand sanitizers were expired, some by up to four years.
The inspector general made 11 recommendations.
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"While DHS concurs with the OIG's recommendations, we had already
previously identified many of the issues prior to the review, and
have taken comprehensive actions to address them," including
finalizing the recall of the expired medicines, DHS spokesman S.Y.
Lee said in a statement.
Homeland Security, with more than 240,000 employees, is charged with
protecting the United States from a range of threats from weather
disasters to terrorism, including threats to water supplies, power
plants and other infrastructure.
"The mounting risk of a worldwide influenza pandemic poses numerous
potentially devastating consequences for critical infrastructure in
the United States," the report said.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu; Editing by Eric Walsh)
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