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Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
July 9, 2002
09:00 AM
2123 Rayburn House Office Building
Mr.
Chairman and members of the Committee: I
appreciate your far-reaching interest in Homeland Security and particularly your
attention to the public health and bioterrorism threats that are the focus of
this hearing, and I thank you for the chance to participate in this hearing.
My name is Margaret (Peggy) Hamburg.
I am a physician and a public health professional, currently serving as
Vice President for Biological Programs at NTI, a private foundation, co-chaired
by Ted Turner and Sam Nunn, whose mission is to reduce the global threat from
weapons of mass destruction. Previously,
I have served as Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation in the
Department of Health and Human Services in the last Administration; as New York
City Health Commissioner for six years, under both Mayor Dinkins and Mayor
Giuliani; and as Assistant Director of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health.
I have spent much of my time over many years working on bioterrorism
preparedness and response, and I welcome this opportunity to offer my views on
the new Department of Homeland Security and improving US defenses against
bioterrorism.
Events
this past fall - including the attacks of September 11 and the dissemination
of anthrax through the postal system - demonstrated our nation's
vulnerability to terrorism, and underscored both the importance and complexity
of homeland defense.
I
applaud current efforts to give greater authority and accountability to our
homeland security program, including the creation of a new federal Department of
Homeland Security. There is a
strong rationale for consolidating some of the many departments and agencies
that share similar functions or provide various aspects of what is needed for
comprehensive preparedness and response. Both
the Administration's Bill to establish a Department of Homeland Security and
S. 2452 to establish a Department of Homeland Security and a National Office for
Combating Terrorism as introduced by Senator Lieberman and colleagues, offer
important opportunities to strengthen leadership, focus and coordination of
essential programs and policies. However,
they also raise a number of concerns.
Preparing
our nation against the threat of terrorist attack requires well-defined
authority, accountability and coordination across an exceedingly broad array of
agencies and activities. The
existing Office of Homeland Security, despite the yeoman efforts of Governor
Ridge and his staff, is clearly not structured for the task.
A new cabinet-level Department of Homeland Security can potentially
improve coordination of U.S. government activities such as border security,
customs procedures and aspects of emergency response.
But improving coordination of activities related to bioterrorism
prevention, preparedness and response is a greater challenge.
In my
testimony this morning, I want to briefly raise a number of issues that apply
broadly to the creation of a new Department of Homeland Security, then focus my
attention specifically on the biological threat.
DEPARTMENT
OF HOMELAND SECURITY: SOME BROAD CONCERNS
The attacks of September 11
followed by the anthrax attacks have created great political pressure on the
White House and Congress to take action to improve homeland security.
Just as President Bush refused to be rushed with his post-September
military response in Afghanistan and delayed the strikes until they could be
timed for maximum effectiveness, so must Congress - in creating a Department
of Homeland Security, act deliberately, with full analysis and without undue
haste, before taking steps it will find hard to reverse.
We need to move forward only
after the most careful consideration of our goals and how best to achieve them.
Several important concerns come to mind:
Need
for a Strategic Framework
The creation of a new
Department of Homeland Security represents an ambitious reorganization which
will be difficult to implement and disruptive to many functions of government.
Even under the best of
circumstances, this restructuring will cost time and momentum in current
programs. Thus the goals
must be defined before legislation is passed, so the benefits of the new
structure outweigh the costs of achieving that structure. We should be
very clear about what we are doing and why - spelling out goals and
objectives, as well as the related roles and responsibilities of the various
partners.
Need
for Balance
Current
plans require that a great many agencies and agency components be pulled into
one large Department focused primarily on terrorism preparedness and response.
At the same time, this new Department of Homeland Security will still be
responsible for dealing with a broad range of other activities.
Many of these more routine activities will be important to the core
Departmental mission because they will, on a regular basis, allow for the
practice of systems that would be recruited into service in the event of an
attack (e.g. disaster response and sheltering, FEMA). Similarly, routine
non-terrorism activities might serve to identify unusual patterns or situations
that might signal an impending terrorist event (e.g. monitoring shoreline for
drug-runners or boating accident rescues, Coast Guard).
However, there is serious concern that when you create a Department as
diverse as this one would be, you will either lose focus on the organizing
mission of countering terrorism or you will fail to effectively support those
other routine functions. It is hard
to imagine a Department remaining honed in on terrorism preparedness and
response while responding to mudslides, hurricanes and fires, monitoring the
fisheries, searching out drug traffickers, controlling hog cholera and
investigating outbreaks of disease. It
is also hard to imagine effective leadership for such a diverse array of tasks,
requiring an equally diverse array of professional backgrounds and expertise.
Need
to Address Existing Weaknesses (Not Just Move Pieces Around)
Given
the above concerns about managing this complex and varied new Department,
serious questions must be raised as to how the Department will remedy known
weaknesses in certain of its component agencies and activities.
Reorganizing defective components will not improve performance.
Some of the problems may benefit from new leadership or enhanced
attention and scrutiny, but without a clear game plan and focused strategy,
others may continue to fester, or worse, their continuing dysfunction may be
amplified in a new and confusing bureaucracy.
A host of personnel, budgetary and jurisdictional issues may add to the
difficulties of providing appropriate oversight, management and operational
accountability.
Need
to Maintain Program Connectivity/Coherence
In
several domains, but particularly with respect to bioterrorism, the creation of
a new and distinct Department may serve to disconnect certain functions such as
bioterrorism surveillance, laboratory networks and response from the
infrastructure needed to respond to routine, non-intentional public health
issues. The response to a disease
outbreak, whether naturally occurring or intentionally caused, will require the
same critical components. Most
likely, we will not initially know the cause of an emerging epidemic.
What is more, our overall infrastructure for infectious disease
recognition and response is far from robust.
We must be careful not to further fragment our capacity, and
inadvertently undermine our own best interests.
We must also avoid the unnecessary development of duplicative systems at
a time of limited resources.
HOMELAND
SECURITY AND THE BIOLOGICAL THREAT
As
our nation struggles to respond to the concerns posed by bioterrorism, both the
nature of the threat and the role of public health, medicine and science
continue to be poorly understood and underemphasized. The threat of bioterrorism is fundamentally different from
other threats we face, such as "conventional" terrorism or attack with a
chemical or nuclear weapon. By its
very nature, the bioweapons threat - with its close links to naturally
occurring infectious agents and disease - requires a different paradigm.
Designing that paradigm
is proving to be a difficult challenge. Public
health has never been traditionally viewed as an element of national security.
Consequently, those who specialize in national security are largely
unfamiliar with the public health system - what it is, how it works and why it
is important to our overall mission of protecting the nation.
It is not surprising that the various Commission Reports (e.g. Hart-Rudman)
that have looked at national security/terrorism issues and current legislative
proposals for the creation of a federal Department of Homeland Security have had
trouble conceptualizing an appropriate organizational approach that includes
bioterrorism preparedness and other biodefense activities.
In fact, there is no clear and simple answer to the question of how best
to organize the components of an effective bioterrorism prevention, preparedness
and response program.
Critical Elements of
a National Response
Certainly,
before a major reorganization of the agencies and activities involved in
biodefense, we must understand how these components need to mobilize and work
together in every stage of defense - from prevention, to preparedness, to
response. Accomplishment of
this task would greatly benefit from a thorough and complete critical analysis
of our response to the anthrax attacks.
It is stunning and disappointing that
we haven't undertaken a systematic review of what happened.
And I strongly recommend that an
independent and comprehensive after-action review of the response to the anthrax
letters be undertaken. It
should be done in a
rigorous fashion, looking within and across the relevant agencies of government,
at all levels,
and at the relationships
with private sector organizations. We cannot afford to let these incidents go by
without taking stock of what happened, what should have happened (but did not),
and what needs to be done to improve response in the future.
This must be more than a listing of lessons learned.
It needs to be a well-researched report, with thoughtful and informed
analysis, identification of gaps in preparedness and response, and realistic
recommendations for improvement. To the best of my knowledge, no such exercise
is currently underway in a crosscutting and systematic manner. Even
as the aftermath and the investigation of the of
the anthrax letters is still unfolding, there is still a real urgency to
undertake such a process, before significant events
fade from memory and before new events and priorities overwhelm us.
Such
an analysis would give us indispensable insight into how we should structure our
national response to bioterrorism, and how we should incorporate the following
four essential elements.
(1)
Prevention. Every
effort must be made to reduce the likelihood that dangerous pathogens will be
acquired or used by those that want to do harm.
This must include improving intelligence, limiting inappropriate access
to certain biological agents and establishing standards that will help prevent
the development and spread of biological agents as weapons.
(2)
Strengthening public health.
Rapid detection and response will depend on enhanced disease surveillance
and outbreak investigation from a well-trained cadre of public health
professionals, educated and alert health care providers, upgraded laboratories
to support diagnosis, and improved communications across all levels of
government, across agencies and across the public and private sector.
(3)
Enhancing medical care capacity.
We must improve treatment for victims of an attack by enhancing local and
federal emergency medical response teams, training health professionals to
diagnose and treat these diseases, developing strategies to improve the ability
of hospitals to rapidly increase emergency capacity, and providing necessary
drugs or vaccines where they are needed through the National Pharmaceutical
Stockpile.
(4)
Research. A
comprehensive research agenda will serve as the foundation of future
preparedness. Perhaps most
urgently, we need improved detectors/diagnostics, along with better vaccines and
new medications.
Some of these activities are already
underway, but need to be strengthened and extended. Other programs and policies still need to be developed and
implemented. All are essential for
homeland security. Yet it is
important to note that while certain aspects of these activities are required to
respond to the threat of bioterrorism specifically, these programs are just as
important for the day-to-day, routine activities of public health and medical
care.
Potential
Benefits of Housing Biodefense Activities in a New Federal Department
There
are certain real advantages to be gained from placing these programs within a
new federal Department of Homeland Security.
First and foremost, the biological threat, and the necessary programs to
address it, is of profound importance to our national security.
These activities require greatly enhanced priority and support.
By residing within this new Department, they may be more likely to
command that needed attention and support.
Furthermore, experts in biological weapons threats, biodefense and public
health preparedness must be full partners at the national security table,
participating in strategic planning, policymaking and program design and
implementation. Being part of the
Department of Homeland Security might help to institutionalize this important
participation.
In
addition, legitimate concerns have been raised that if not housed within this
new Department, crucial public health and bioterrorism programs may be
neglected, and important operational public health and biomedical defense
functions may not be integrated with national security objectives.
Clearly,
there is an urgent need for improved coordination and integration of
bioterrorism programs and policies across agencies of government.
The current patchwork - of programs that address bioterrorism
prevention, preparedness and response, including research - is inadequate and
unacceptable. These need to be
brought together into a collective programmatic vision, and implemented in a
manner that sets priorities, supports synergy, identifies gaps and avoids
unnecessary overlap or duplication. To
date, this has proved a difficult challenge.
One might argue that the most effective way to address this concern is to
pull these activities together under one roof.
There
might be additional benefit of centralizing aspects of biodefense activities
under one roof from the perspective of certain state and local government
entities as well as private sector entities - including the medical care
system and the pharmaceutical industry - all of whom are essential partners in
combating bioterrorism and should also be integrated into an effective vision
and framework for action. Looking
at the federal government from the outside, it can be very confusing to discern
where and how best to interact with the system. Again, the creation of a unified site within a Department of
Homeland Security might reduce confusion, strengthen the ability to work across
levels of government, and support the kinds of public-private partnerships that
will prove essential to success.
Potential
Disadvantages of Inclusion in a New Federal Department / Recommendations
While
there clearly are benefits to be gained by moving certain aspects of
bioterrorism and related public health issues into a consolidated new Department
of Homeland Security, a serious cost/benefit analysis has to consider how best
to ensure that our overall governmental effort is maximally effective.
Organization of Bioterrorism Activities
As
currently envisioned, the Administration's proposal for a Department of
Homeland Security would seek to develop a single, government-wide, comprehensive
and integrated research and preparedness plan to prevent chemical, biological,
radiological and nuclear (CBRN) attacks, to reduce our nation's
vulnerabilities to terrorism and to minimize damage and assure effective
response should an attack occur.
This
approach is intrinsically troubling - from the point of view of biodefense -
because, as I noted earlier, the bioterrorism threat has some very distinctive
features as compared to "conventional" terrorism or other weapons of mass
destruction. Past experience tells
us that many so-called bioterrorism programs failed to achieve their potential
because they were addressed within the framework of CBRN or "Chem/Bio". There was an underlying assumption that these problems could
be effectively approached with a "one size fits all" model, but in reality,
such programs simply failed to address the biological component.
Meaningful
progress against the bioterrorism threat depends on understanding it in the
context of infectious and/or epidemic disease.
It requires different investments and different partners.
Until the distinctive nature of bioterrorism is fully taken into account
at the level of policy, our nation's preparedness programs will continue to be
inadequately designed: the wrong first responders will be trained and equipped;
we will fail to fully build the critical infrastructure we need to detect and
respond; the wrong research agendas will be developed; and we will never
effectively grapple with the long-term consequence management needs that such an
event would entail. We may also
miss critical opportunities to prevent an attack from occurring in the first
place.
Recommendations:
(1)
Any new Department of Homeland Security must be staffed at the highest
levels of leadership and decision-making with individuals who have significant
expertise in public health, infectious disease and biodefense/bioterrorism.
(2)
An Undersecretary for Biological Programs should be appointed to oversee
and integrate the various activities going on within the Department of Homeland
Security that relate to the biological threat.
In addition, that individual should serve as liaison to the various other
Departments with significant responsibilities and programs in the biological
arena.
(3)
An external advisory group for biological programs should be established
with the responsibility of reviewing the appropriateness and comprehensiveness
of biological threat related programs, policies and resource allocation / budget
priorities.
Emergency Response/Role of Public Health
Infrastructure
As
noted earlier, a bioterrorism attack would differ in fundamental ways from other
forms of terrorist assault. The
requirements for effective bioterrorism preparedness and response are, for the
most part, substantially different as well.
Biological terrorism is not a "lights and sirens" kind of attack.
Unless the release is announced or a fortuitous discovery occurs early
on, there will be no discrete event to signal that an attack has happened, and
no site you can cordon off while you take care of the casualties, search for
clues and eventually clean up and repair the damage. Instead, a biological terrorism event would most likely
unfold as a disease epidemic, spread out in time and place before authorities
even recognize that an attack has occurred.
We would see the first evidence of attack only after people begin
appearing at their doctor's office or emergency rooms with unusual symptoms or
an inexplicable disease. In fact,
it may prove difficult to ever identify the perpetrators, the site of release,
or even to determine whether the disease came from a natural outbreak or a
terrorist attack.
Under
most circumstances, the "first responders" to a bioterrorism event will be
public health officials and health care workers. "Ground zero" will be in hospitals, health care
facilities and laboratories. The
"battlefield" response will come in the form of disease diagnosis, outbreak
investigation, treatment of the sick and public health actions required to stop
continuing contagion and stem disease. How
swiftly we recognize and respond to a potential attack will dramatically
influence our ability to reduce casualties and control disease. All of these recognition and response functions are more
closely tied to public health and medical care activities than to the emergency
response required for other types of catastrophic terrorism or even other kinds
of natural disasters.
In
the months since 9/11, the Bush administration - through programs developed
and administered by the HHS Office of Public Health Preparedness (OPHP) and the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) - has made some progress in
building the programs necessary to strengthen public health infrastructure for
bioterrorism within this broader context of infectious disease.
If these programs are carved out of their current habitats and moved into
this new Department, it will disconnect bioterrorism preparedness from other
essential components of infectious disease response and control, thin out
already limited expertise, and complicate the ability of our public health
partners at the state and local level to work together effectively.
If the nation develops two parallel systems for infectious disease
surveillance and response - one (that for bioterrorism) of which is only
really activated and practiced in a crisis - the likely outcome will be to
weaken and fragment our nation's capacity to respond to infectious disease -
whether occurring naturally or caused intentionally.
Recommendations:
(1)
HHS and CDC should continue to have direct responsibility for programs
related to the public health infrastructure for infectious disease recognition,
investigation and response, including bioterrorism.
(2)
A public health professional with appropriate background and experience
could be placed within the Department of Homeland Security, perhaps with dual
reporting to the DHS Secretary and the HHS Secretary.
This individual could then work closely with the CDC Director to achieve
mutually agreed upon public health priorities for bioterrorism preparedness and
response
(3)
The Department of Homeland Security should assure greater coordination,
collaboration and program integration among the components of government doing
infectious disease surveillance activities (e.g. DOD, USDA, Wildlife and
Forestry).
Biodefense
Research
Further
investments must be made in biomedical research to develop new drugs, vaccines,
rapid diagnostic tests and other medical weapons to add to the arsenal against
bioterrorism. At the same time, it
is also essential that we improve technologies to rapidly detect biological
agents in environmental samples and develop other technologies to protect the
health of the public. We must learn
more about how these organisms cause disease and how the human immune system
responds so that we can develop better treatments and disease containment
strategies to protect us in the future. In
addition, we must also devote more attention and resources to "systems
research," in an effort to understand more about such issues as personal
protective gear, environmental safety and decontamination.
Success
will require collaboration among many agencies of government (HHS, DOD, DOE,
USDA and others), academia and the private sector. Coordination of the
development and budgetary support for such a comprehensive, integrated
biodefense research agenda could certainly be offered under the auspices of the
proposed Department of Homeland Security. This
could help make sure that investment supports both national security needs and
research and development priorities. It
would also help integrate the bioterrorism-related research activities of the
various mission agencies, including threats to humans, animals and crops.
Hopefully, this would help foster proper recognition and support for
elements of the research enterprise which are currently
undervalued/under-resourced - such as the United States Army Medical Research
Institute for Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID) and the Department of
Agriculture's animal health research facility, Plum Island.
It would also help identify program gaps, overlaps and opportunities for
synergy.
At the
same time, the role of the Department of Homeland Security should be that of
coordinator/facilitator. The actual
design and implementation of the research agenda and its component programs must
remain at the level of the mission agencies, where the scientific and technical
expertise resides. With a few
possible exceptions, it would be unrealistic and inefficient to build the kind
of sophisticated scientific expertise necessary to take on the direct conduct or
management of research and development activities across a broad range of
disciplines and technologies at the level of this new Department.
Recommendations:
(1)
A research coordination office could be established within the Department
of Homeland Security
and charged with responsibility for assuring the development and funding support
for a comprehensive, integrated biodefense research agenda. This research
coordination office could also help support the integration of threat and
vulnerability analysis with the process of setting the research agenda. Such a
research coordination office might also be effectively placed within a strong
White House Office of Homeland Security, where it could work across the full set
of cabinet agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, to ensure a
comprehensive, integrated and appropriately funded biodefense research agenda.
An individual with appropriate scientific background and experience should head
this office.
(2)
Given the fact that HHS is the primary department with responsibility for
biomedical research, and the unique role played by NIH, resources to support the
NIH biodefense research agenda should remain within that Department.
(3)
An external advisory mechanism should be established to encourage ongoing
communication and collaboration with academic and industry partners.
New mechanisms must be developed to engage participation from outstanding
scientists from academe and industry, and to bring new young scientists into
these endeavors.
(4)
The highest level of government commitment is needed to address the
national crisis
in
the development and production of new vaccines and antimicrobial drugs - a
crisis that is growing in urgency in light of the bioterrorism threat.
A new Department of Homeland Security, working closely with the
appropriate agencies of government (e.g. FDA, NIH, DOD), industry and Congress,
could lead such an effort, or it could be undertaken directly from the White
House.
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Mr.
Chairman and Members of the Committee: Government
has no more important mission than protecting the lives of its citizens.
A new Department of Homeland Security and a heightened defense against
bioterror go directly to the heart of that mission.
These tasks are as complicated as they are crucial.
I thank you for the depth of the interest you've exhibited by holding
this hearing. I stand ready
to help in any way I can. And I
would be happy to answer your questions - now or in the future.
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