Saturday, January 27, 2007

Operation Winter Willow : Part One

# 364

 

Next week, the UK will begin the first part of their much anticipated operation Winter Willow, a major nationwide panflu drill.  After a slow start, the UK has obviously begun to take the threat of a pandemic very seriously.   This from the Sunday Times

 

 

 

Thousands to test flu emergency response

David Cracknell, Political Editor

THE government is to conduct the largest emergency exercise since the cold war on Tuesday to test whether it could cope in the event of a flu epidemic in Britain.

 

Confidential plans have been circulated in Whitehall that will involve thousands of civil servants and officials from the emergency services. Some government advisers believe that a bird flu epidemic has overtaken terrorism as the biggest risk facing the country.

 

The exercise is designed to ensure that the authorities could cope with up to 30% of the population being infected and a possible 750,000 deaths.

 

Guidelines for coping with an epidemic suggest that people may have to be shown how to dispose of the bodies of family members killed by the disease. They also envisage that in the event of an outbreak, prisoners may have to be released early.

 

Operation Winter Willow will involve all the emergency services, council officials and government ministers including Patricia Hewitt, the health secretary, and David Miliband, the environment secretary. A second phase of the exercise will be held on February 19 and February 20.

 

Police will stop people entering exclusion zones and emergency centres will be set up to make the exercise as real as possible.

 

Ministers will take part in mock media conferences in what is being described as “one of the largest and most ambitious” projects of its kind ever conducted.

 

The exercise will also involve international agencies and bodies, including the World Health Organisation and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

 

Some of the exercise may be shown on television.

 

This article goes on to say that government experts fear up to 7 million Britons could die in a truly severe pandemic.

 

It will be interesting to find out what lessons they learn over the next month from this exercise, and how it will affect public awareness in the UK.