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Responding to detection of aerosolized Bacillus anthracis by autonomous detection systems in the workplace.

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TLDR
This report provides guidelines in the following six areas: response and consequence management planning, including the minimum components of a facility response plan; immediate response and evacuation; decontamination of potentially exposed workers to remove spores from clothing and skin and prevent introduction of B. anthracis into the worker's home and conveyances; laboratory confirmation of an ADS signal; steps for evaluating potentially contaminated environments.
Abstract: 
Autonomous detection systems (ADSs) are under development to detect agents of biologic and chemical terror in the environment. These systems will eventually be able to detect biologic and chemical hazards reliably and provide approximate real-time alerts that an agent is present. One type of ADS that tests specifically for Bacillus anthracis is being deployed in hundreds of postal distribution centers across the United States. Identification of aerosolized B. anthracis spores in an air sample can facilitate prompt on-site decontamination of workers and subsequent administration of postexposure prophylaxis to prevent inhalational anthrax. Every employer who deploys an ADS should develop detailed plans for responding to a positive signal. Responding to ADS detection of B. anthracis involves coordinating responses with community partners and should include drills and exercises with these partners. This report provides guidelines in the following six areas: 1) response and consequence management planning, including the minimum components of a facility response plan; 2) immediate response and evacuation; 3) decontamination of potentially exposed workers to remove spores from clothing and skin and prevent introduction of B. anthracis into the worker's home and conveyances; 4) laboratory confirmation of an ADS signal; 5) steps for evaluating potentially contaminated environments; and 6) postexposure prophylaxis and follow-up.

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References
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TL;DR: This revised consensus statement presents new information based on the analysis of the anthrax attacks of 2001, including developments in the investigation of the Anthrax Attacks of 2001; important symptoms, signs, and laboratory studies; new diagnostic clues that may help future recognition of this disease; updated antibiotic therapeutic considerations; and judgments about environmental surveillance and decontamination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bioterrorism-related inhalational anthrax: the first 10 cases reported in the United States.

TL;DR: Clinical presentation and course of cases of bioterrorism-related inhalational anthrax, in the District of Columbia, Florida, New Jersey, and New York, are described; survival of patients was markedly higher than previously reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Sverdlovsk anthrax outbreak of 1979

TL;DR: It is concluded that the escape of an aerosol of anthrax pathogen at the military facility caused the outbreak of Sverdlovsk and that most victims worked or lived in a narrow zone extending from a military facility to the southern city limit.
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Medical Aspects of Chemical and Biological Warfare

TL;DR: Medical Aspects of Chemical and Biological Warfare as discussed by the authors is a volume of the Textbook of Military Medicine series with the focus of the information being to foster discussion that may form the basis of doctrine and policy.
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