1 / 12

The International Health Regulations and Aviation Operations

The International Health Regulations and Aviation Operations. Cairo FAL Meeting, March 2004 William Cocksedge, IHR Revision Project WHO Geneva. E P I D E M I C A L E R T & R E S P O N S E. I N T E R N A T I O N A L H E A L T H R E G U L A T I O N S.

Download Presentation

The International Health Regulations and Aviation Operations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The International Health Regulations and Aviation Operations Cairo FAL Meeting, March 2004 William Cocksedge, IHR Revision Project WHO Geneva

  2. E P I D E M I C A L E R T & R E S P O N S E I N T E R N A T I O N A L H E A L T H R E G U L A T I O N S Respond to the unexpected Improve preparedness Contain known risks G L O B A L P A R T N E R S H I P

  3. IHR purpose • “ensure the maximum security against the international spread of disease with a minimum interference with world traffic”

  4. “Real time” Event Management • Notification/verification of “public health emergencies of international concern” • both disease events and risks • unofficial sources used • verification support offered • response support if required • WHO provids a “template” of recommendations & measures • electronic publication and updates

  5. IHR National Focal Points • National technical co-ordinating site (public health institution) for the IHR revision process • Co-ordinate the analysis of national public health events and risks • Advise national authorities on notifications made to WHO and recommendations from WHO • Disseminate information to, and co-ordinate input from, key national areas: disease surveillance, port, airport and ground crossing public health services, medical facilities and other government departments

  6. Disease risks for aircraft operations • Respiratory spread the most problematic, but other risks can and do occur - e.g. vector-borne disease • Precautions for crew and passengers necessary in some instances • Application of on-board measures requires up-to-date information, both background and technical • Measures must be carefully considered, with input from all impacted agencies

  7. SARS • SARS was spread rapidly by airline travellers • International agencies and industry closely linked with WHO for response • Some issues not fully resolved (e.g. passenger contact information) • Public health contingency plans were not fully operational at airports

  8. Preparations for future disease events • Inter-agency planning underway to address international disease risks - ICAO, IATA, ECAC, ACI, WHO, Member States • Both emergency and routine capacities addressed in revised International Health Regulations draft • Proposed addition of Airport contingency plans in ICAO documents • Joint work (IMSO/IHO/IMO/ICAO) to send urgent public health messages to aircraft and ships

  9. Core point of entry capacities • Core Requirements for public health at points of entry: • Detect and report the importation of public health risks (in persons, conveyances, goods) that indicate disease events in other countries • Provide routine services, like sanitation inspections of airport facilities • Provide “elastic” capacity at point of entry and local public health level for public health emergencies of international concern • Establish pre-set reporting and response linkages with public health agencies

  10. Core point of entry capacities • Activity areas • Routine: • ensure facilities for travellers are safe, e.g. clean food/water, vector control • review/provide documents for travel - e.g. vaccination certificates, aircraft/ship certificates • inspect conveyances when required to issue certificates or investigate a possible public health risk • eliminate vectors and other public health risks if found on board (designated ports only, not during public health emergencies)

  11. Point of entry capacities • Activity areas • For international public health emergencies: • - develop a rapid communication/reporting system to link points of entry with local and national public health support • - elastic “surge” capacity required to implement emergency measures, as required, e.g. supplementary public health staff, logistics like dedicated ambulances and hospitals, coordination role between public health agencies and airport/aircraft operations

  12. Work related to implementing the IHR • The health part of the current Aircraft General Declaration is out of date, in terms of capturing new disease risks • During public health emergencies, urgent public health information may be needed by aircraft in-flight • This information could include the nature of the risk, the specific public health measures to be taken on board, and the measures recommended for application by airport health authorities on arrival

More Related