Olowokure B, Pooransingh S, Tempowski J, Palmer S, Meredith T
Health Protection Agency Regional Surveillance Unit (West Midlands), Regional Epidemiology Unit, Heartlands Hospital, Birmingham, England.
Bull World Health Organ. 2005 Dec;83(12):928-34. Epub 2006 Jan 30.
In December 2001, an expert consultation convened by WHO identified strengthening national and global chemical incident preparedness and response as a priority. WHO is working towards this objective by developing a surveillance and response system for chemical incidents. This report describes the frequency, nature and geographical location of acute chemical incidents of potential international concern from August 2002 to December 2003.
Acute chemical incidents were actively identified through several informal (e.g. Internet-based resources) and formal (e.g. various networks of organizations) sources and assessed against criteria for public health emergencies of international concern using the then proposed revised International Health Regulations (IHR). WHO regional and country offices were contacted to obtain additional information regarding identified incidents.
Altogether, 35 chemical incidents from 26 countries met one or more of the IHR criteria. The WHO European Region accounted for 43% (15/35) of reports. The WHO Regions for Africa, Eastern Mediterranean and Western Pacific each accounted for 14% (5/35); South-East Asia and the Americas accounted for 9% (3/35) and 6% (2/35), respectively. Twenty-three (66%) events were identified within 24 hours of their occurrence.
To our knowledge this is the first global surveillance system for chemical incidents of potential international concern. Limitations such as geographical and language bias associated with the current system are being addressed. Nevertheless, the system has shown that it can provide early detection of important events, as well as information on the magnitude and geographical distribution of such incidents. It can therefore contribute to improving global public health preparedness.
2001年12月,世界卫生组织召集的一次专家磋商会确定,加强国家和全球化学品事故防范与应对能力是一项优先事项。世界卫生组织正在通过建立一个化学品事故监测与应对系统来努力实现这一目标。本报告描述了2002年8月至2003年12月间具有潜在国际影响的急性化学品事故的发生频率、性质和地理位置。
通过若干非正式(如基于互联网的资源)和正式(如各组织网络)来源积极识别急性化学品事故,并根据当时提议修订的《国际卫生条例》(IHR)中关于国际关注的突发公共卫生事件的标准进行评估。与世界卫生组织各区域和国家办事处联系,以获取有关已确认事故的更多信息。
来自26个国家的35起化学品事故符合一项或多项《国际卫生条例》标准。世界卫生组织欧洲区域的报告占43%(15/35)。非洲、东地中海和西太平洋区域各占14%(5/35);东南亚和美洲分别占9%(3/35)和6%(2/35)。23起(66%)事件在发生后24小时内被确认。
据我们所知,这是首个针对具有潜在国际影响的化学品事故的全球监测系统。当前系统存在的地理和语言偏见等局限性正在得到解决。尽管如此,该系统已表明它能够早期发现重要事件,并提供有关此类事故规模和地理分布的信息。因此可以有助于提高全球公共卫生防范能力。